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UNIVERSITY 
OF  FLORIDA 
LIBRARIES 


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LYRASIS  Members  and  Sloan  Foundation 


http://www.archive.org/details/bluebellsotherveOOmase 


THE   BLUEBELLS 
AND  OTHER  VERSE 


THE   WORKS  OF  JOHN  MASEFIELD 


PLAYS 


The  Faithful 
Good  Friday 
Tristan  and  holt 
Easter 
Melloney  Holtspur 


A  King's  Daughter 
The  Trial  of  Jesus 
The  Tragedy  of  Nan 
The  Coming  of  Christ 
End  and  Beginning 


POETRY 


Dauber 

The  Daffodil  Fields 

Philip  the  King 

Lollingdon  Downs 

A  Poem  and  Two  Plays 

Reynard  the  Fox 

Enslaved 

Right  Royal 

Selected  Poems  (new  edition) 

King  Cole 


Poems  (collected) 

Midsummer  Night 

Minnie  Maylow's  Story 

A  Tale  of  Troy 

A  Letter  from  Pontus 

Gautama  the  Enlightened 

Wonderings 

Natalie  Maisie  and  Pavilastukay 

On  the  Hill 

The  Bluebells  and  Other  Verse 


FICTION 


Sard  Harker 

Odtaa 

The  Midnight  Folk 

The  Hawbucks 

The  Bird  of  Dawning 

The  Taking  of  the  Gry 

The  Box  of  Delights 


Victorious  Troy 

Eggs  and  Baker 

The  Square  Peg 

Dead  Ned 

Live  and  Kicking  Ned 

Basilissa 

Conquer 


GENERAL 


Gallipoli 

The  Old  Front  Line 

St.  George  and  the  Dragon 

The  Battle  of  the  Somme 

Recent  Prose 

With  the  Living  Voice 

The  Wanderer  of  Liverpool 

Poetry :  A  Lecture 

So  Long  to  Learn 


The  Conway 

The  Nine  Days  Wonder 

In  the  Mill 

New  Chum 

Thanks  Before   Going  and  A 

Macbeth  Production 
A  Book  of  Both  Sorts 
A  Book  of  Prose  Selections 
William  Shakespeare 


JOHN  MASEFIELD 


THE  BLUEBELLS 

AND  OTHER  VERSE 


THE  MACMILLAN  COMPANY 

NEW   YORK 
I96l 


First  published  1961 

©  by  John  Masefield  1961 
All  rights  reserved 


Printed  in  Great  Britain 

by  The  Windmill  Press  Ltd 

Kingswood,  Surrey 


CONTENTS 


I. 

The  Bluebells 

1 

2. 

The  Starry  Night 

4 

The  Night  of  Kings 

7 

The  Song  of  Gaspar 

36 

3- 

Ossian 

37 

4. 

Eighty-Five  to  Win 

73 

5. 

Odysseus  Tells 

82 

6. 

King  Edward  the  Second  Tells  his  Story 

106 

7- 

A  Cry  to  Music 

121 

8. 

The  Princess  Malinal 

122 

9- 

Memories 

132 

10. 

Middle  Farm,  or  The  Cherries 

135 

11. 

In  Praise  of  Nurses 

140 

12. 

The  Hawthorns  at  the  Chantry  Door 

143 

13. 

Question  and  Answer 

152 

14. 

King  Edward  the  Confessor  and  his  Ring 

162 

15. 

The  Buried  Bride 

166 

16. 

John  Grimaldi 

170 

17. 

A  Word  with  Sir  Francis  Drake 

178 

18. 

On  the  Shipwreck  of  Sir  Cloudesley  Shovell 

186 

19. 

On  H.M.S.  Calliope  at  Apia 

191 

20. 

On  Pilots 

195 

21. 

Captain  Barnaby 

200 

THE  BLUEBELLS 


We  stood  upon  the  grass  beside  the  road, 
At  a  wood's  fence,  to  look  among  the  trees. 
In  windless  noon  the  burning  May-time  glowed. 
Gray,  in  young  green,  the  beeches  stood  at  ease. 
Light  speckled  in  the  wood  or  left  it  dim : 
There  lay  a  blue  in  which  no  ship  could  swim, 
Within  whose  peace  no  water  ever  flowed. 

Within  that  pool  no  shadow  ever  showed; 

Tideless  was  all  that  mystery  of  blue. 

Out  of  eternities  man  never  knew 

A  living  growth  man  never  reaped  nor  sowed 

Snatched  in  the  dim  its  fitness  from  the  hour 

A  miracle  unspeakable  of  flower 

That  tears  in  the  heart's  anguish  answered-to. 

How  paint  it;  how  describe?  None  has  the  power. 

It  only  had  the  power  upon  the  soul 

To  consecrate  the  spirit  and  the  hour, 

To  light  to  sudden  rapture  and  console, 

Its  beauty  called  a  truce :  forgave :  forgot 

All  the  long  horror  of  man's  earthly  lot, 

A  miracle  unspeakable  of  flower 

In  a  green  May  unutterably  blue. 


For  what,  for  whom,  was  all  the  beauty  spread, 
This  colour,  that  had  power  to  dissolve 
Man's  fugitive  dismays  into  resolve 
And  be  a  balsam  upon  hearts  that  bled? 
In  all  the  mile  of  marvel,  what  immense 
Current  of  life  had  power  so  intense 
To  wrest  such  bounty  out  of  sun  and  soil? 
What  starved  imagination  ached  to  feed? 
What  harassed  heart  implored  for  an  assoil? 

Who  can  behold  it  on  this  lonely  hill, 
Here  in  the  one  week  when  the  wonder  shows, 
Here,  where  old  silence  waits  on  the  wind's  will, 
Where,  on  the  track,  none  but  the  postman  goes, 
Where  upon  mouse  or  bird  the  kestrel  drops, 
Or  spotted  'pecker  burrowing  his  bill 
Furrows  the  bark,  or  the  red  squirrel  hops 
Or  hunting  vixen  lifts  a  questing  nose, 
What  other  seer  can  the  beauty  thrill? 

None,  in  the  day ;  and,  when  the  beauty  dims, 

When  moonlight  makes  the  still  un-leafy  tree, 

A  spell-bound  ghost  that  cannot  move  his  limbs, 

What  other  passer  can  be  here  to  see? 

The  new-come  night-jar  chirring  on  the  branch? 

The  nightingale  exulting  in  his  hymns? 

The  wood-mice  flitting  where  the  moon-beams  blanch? 

The  wind,  in  the  few  fir-trees,  like  a  sea 

On  which  the  pale  owl  like  a  feather  swims? 

For  none  of  these  can  such  a  marvel  be. 


Has  it  a  source  in  a  forgotten  scene? 

Is  it  a  mark  of  vital  methods  taken, 

Of  choices  made,  at  turning-points  of  Fate 

Whether  to  know  the  Earth  or  seek  the  Queen? 

Is  it  but  yearly  gladness  of  bonds  shaken? 

After  a  prison,  an  apparent  gate? 

Or  is  this  miracle  of  blue  and  green 

A  symbolling  of  what  it  all  may  mean, 

When  the  Queen  comes  and  all  we  dead  awaken? 


THE  STARRY  NIGHT 

That  starry  Night  when  Christ  was  born, 
The  shepherds  watched  by  Dead  Man's  Thorn; 
They  shared  their  supper  with  the  dogs, 
And  watched  the  sparks  flick  from  the  logs 
Where  the  coppings  from  the  holly  burned. 

Then  the  dogs  growled,  and  faces  turned 
To  horsemen,  coming  from  the  hill. 

A  Captain  called  to  them,  'Keep  still . . . 
We're  riding,  seeking  for  a  sign 
That  human  beings  are  divine  .  . . 
Is  there  such  marvel,  hereabout?' 

The  shepherds  said,  'Us  don't  know  nowt. 
We're  Mr  Jones's  shepherd  chaps. 
Old  Mr  Jones  might  know,  perhaps . . . 
But  if  you've  come  this  country  road, 
You've  passed  his  house  and  never  knowed. 
There's  someone  in  the  town  might  know; 
A  mile  on,  keeping  as  you  go.' 

Long  after  all  had  disappeared, 

More  horsemen  (from  the  woodland),  neared; 

And  one,  a  King,  with  a  dark  skin, 

Cried,  'Friends,  are  gods  and  men  akin? 


A  wonder  tells  of  this,  they  say. 
Is  it  near  here?  Is  this  the  way?' 


'Why,  no'  the  shepherds  said  .  .  .  'Perhaps. 
We're  Mr  Jones's  shepherd  chaps._ 
Old  Mr  Jones  would  know,  I  wis, 
But  he'll  be  gone  to  bed  by  this.' 


After  the  troop  had  passed  away, 

A  third  came  (from  the  River  way) 

And  cried,  'Good  friends,  we  seek  to  find 

Some  guidance  for  the  questing  mind, 

Eternity,  in  all  this  Death, 

Some  life  out-living  flesh  and  breath. 

Can  we  find  this,  the  way  we  ride?' 

'You'd  better  picket  down  and  bide,' 
The  shepherds  said  'And  rest  your  bones. 
We're  shepherds  here  to  Mr  Jones. 
When  morning  comes,  you  ask  of  he, 
For  he'd  know  more  of  that  than  we. 
We're  only  shepherds  here;  so  bide.' 

'We  cannot  wait,'  the  horseman  cried. 
'Life  cannot  wait;  Death  cannot  stay; 
This  midnight  is  our  only  day. 
Push  on,  friends ;  shepherds  all,  farewell. 
This  living  without  Life  is  Hell.' 


The  clatter  of  the  horse-hoofs  failed, 
Along  the  wood  a  barn-owl  wailed; 
The  small  mice  rustled  in  the  wood; 
The  stars  burned  in  their  multitude. 

Meanwhile,  within  the  little  town, 

The  camping  horsemen  settled  down; 

The  horses  drank  at  stream  and  fed 

On  chaff,  from  nose-bags,  picketed. 

The  men  rolled  blankets  out,  and  stretched; 

Black  Nim  their  hard  cheese  supper  fetched; 

Then,  after  spirit  from  the  gourd, 

Each  turned  to  sleep  without  a  word, 

But  shortly  roused  again  to  curse 

A  some-one  calling  for  a  nurse 

To  help  a  woman  in  her  woe. 

All  this  was  very  long  ago. 


6 


THE  NIGHT  OF  KINGS 

Melchior 

The  shepherds,  up  on  Dead  Man's  Wold, 
Heaped  up  the  blaze  against  the  cold ; 
They  told  their  dogs  to  watch  the  sheep 
And  settled  under  rugs  to  sleep 
But  wondered  what  the  star  could  mean 
Where  no  such  star  had  ever  been. 
'It  must  mean  summat,'  as  they  said, 
'Somebody  being  born,  or  dead, 
Or  else  a  war,  or  else  a  pest .  . .  , 
"Leave  dogs  and  stars  alone  is  best," 
My  granfer  said,  and  he  said  true. 
That  King  and  them  there  other  two, 
Were  star-struck,  mad  as  the  March  hare.' 

A  mile  thence,  in  the  market-square 
The  three  troops,  in  the  little  town, 
In  turn  bought  leave  to  settle  down, 
Where  space  was,  up  and  down  a  brook. 

The  horses  blew  their  oats  and  shook 
The  tether-chains ;  the  lanterns  cast 
Odd  gleams  as  men  with  buckets  passed. 
The  inn-doors  slammed  and  jargon  sped 
As  strangers  asked  for  beer  and  bread 
In  strange  speech,  tending  foreign  pence 


Of  silver  minted  long  leagues  thence, 
Stamped  with  a  fish  or  barley  ears. 

'Friends,  it  is  very  many  years, 

Since  I,  King  Melchior,  pitched  tent 

In  that  star-riding  that  we  went. 

I  was  the  first  to  come,  and  took 

First  pick  of  place  and  things  to  cook, 

And  having  bribed  and  picked  and  bought, 

"Now  . . .  supper  and  to  bed,"  I  thought. 

But  in  the  street  there  was  a  welter 
Of  later  horsemen  seeking  shelter; 
All  men  and  horses,  carts  and  jangle 
In  tumult  hard  to  disentangle, 
At  midnight  with  so  little  light, 
With  town  dogs  looking  for  a  bite, 
The  horses  kicking  at  the  press, 
All  stomachs  crying  Emptiness, 
And  all  men  swearing  as  they  knocked 
At  house-doors  nobody  unlocked  . . . 

Most  wisely  .  . .  such  a  tumult  made, 
Mothers  with  daughters  much  afraid. 

So,  as  the  outfits  milled  and  jammed, 
And  door-bolts  clocked  and  windows  slammed, 
The  Town-Reeve  shouted  through  his  hands : 
'Where  are  the  Captains?  Who  commands? 


Sir?  You?  And  you,  Sir?  Right ...  It's  late  . 
You'd  better  picket  down  and  bait 
Here,  in  the  market,  where  you  are. 
These  cattle-pens  will  all  unbar. 
You,  Sir,  take  that  side.  You,  Sir,  here. 
And  keep  this  centre  gangway  clear 
To  all  the  water;  and  set  sentry 
Both  here  and  at  the  tavern  entry. 
And,  please,  no  fires  here,  nor  noise. 
Your  merry  men  must  be  good  boys, 
It's  time  that  people  settled  down. 
We're  early  risers  here  in  town.' 

Well,  order  followed  when  men  heard 
One  definite  commanding  word  .  .  . 
1  turned  towards  my  camp  for  food 
And  passed  by  where  two  captains  stood, 
Outside  a  lighted  door  whose  keepers 
Swore  that  they  could  not  shelter  sleepers .  . 
I  liked  their  looks,  so  said  'Good  friends .  . . 
My  camp  is  just  where  the  town  ends . . . 
There  ...  at  the  light ...  do  come  with  me 
I've  food  and  blanketings  for  three  . . . 
Come  dine  with  me,  and  drink  a  cup. 
And  rest  abed  till  sun  is  up.' 

This  they  were  glad  to  do ;  we  went 
The  less  than  furlong  to  the  tent. 

Within  the  busy  grass  the  greed 
Of  horses,  picketed  at  feed 


Gave  to  the  night  a  crunching  sound 
Of  new  snow  trodden  upon  ground, 
'My  friends,'  I  said,  'Here  we  are  met 
Three  taken  in  a  midnight  net. 
May  we  discover  who  we  are? 
No  doubt,  all  following  the  star. 
My  name  is  Melchior,  a  King ; 

Baltasar 

'I'm  Baltasar,  the  Wondering/ 

Gaspar 

'I  am  Gaspar  of  the  Broken  Heart.' 

Melchior 

'We  come  from  many  miles  apart,' 
I  said,  'And  all  we  wander  by 
Is  just  that  portent  in  the  sky.' 

And  truly,  as  we  chattered  thus 
That  portent  seemed  to  blaze  at  us. 
Its  eye  of  flame  was  sinking  down 
To  westward  of  the  sleeping  town. 
It  seemed  to  crackle  as  it  went. 
I  said  'It's  force  will  soon  be  spent. 
It  can  be  nought  but  flaming  gas, 
Burning  a  distant  world,  alas, 
Not  this,  ah,  no  such  luck,  nor  sense. 
Just  destiny  and  impotence. 

But  never  heed  it,  friends ;  its  light 
Is  only  wonderful  at  night; 

10 


It  is  a  nothingness  by  day, 
The  morning  clears  it  all  away. 
There,  down  among  the  woods  it  wests. 
Come  in,  to  midnight  supper,  guests. 

There,  in  the  lighted  tent,  we  fed, 
But  when  I  sent  the  hands  to  bed, 
I  brought  out  raisins,  nuts  and  wine. 

I  said  'O  comrades,  guests  of  mine, 
Here  we  are  met,  three  wandering  men 
Unlikely  to  be  here  agen, 
Unlikelier  still  to  meet  and  share 
An  hour  together  anywhere, 
Shall  we,  for  this  one  hour,  speak 
Frankly,  of  what  we  know  or  seek, 
Or  shall  we  drink  a  cup  instead 
A  night-cap  cup,  and  so  to  bed?' 

Both  asked  to  linger  and  discuss 
All  sorts  of  questions  troubling  us. 
They  had  not  talked  for  days  (nor  I) 
So  there  we  talked  the  darkness  by. 
While  Heaven  wheeled  its  starry  Wain. 

I  said:  'Now,  I  must  ask  again; 
Not,  who  we  are,  but  why  we  come 
Riding  a-questing  far  from  home?, 
And  at  that  instant,  footsteps  neared 
With  people  muttering  a  word, 
So,  looking  out,  I  hailed  a  pair 
In  a  hurry,  with  a  lantern,  there. 

ii 


'What  is  it?  Are  you  seeking  me?' 
'No,  Captain,'  said  a  man,  'Let  be  .  . . 
Doctor  and  Nurse,  a  child-birth  case, 
I*  the  byre,  by  the  watering-place ; 
Some  wandering  woman  in  distress.' 

'I  hope  your  services  may  bless 
And  all  go  well:  good  night,'  said  I. 

'Good  night,'  they  said,  and  hurried  by. 

Beyond  their  stilling  steps,  I  heard 
The  water  murmuring  her  word. 
I  said  'I  wished  them  well,  indeed. 
And  yet  I  loathe  this  mortal  seed; 
Ever  new  birth,  never  new  sense, 
But  something  here  and  going  hence 
As  silly  as  the  brook  that  goes 
From  underworlds  that  no  man  knows 
To  seas  unseen  and  leaves  no  trace 
Save  other  water  in  its  place  . . . 

Now,  here,  another  senseless  mite 
Flung  headlong  to  this  losing  fight. 
Dragged  by  a  thoughtless  instant's  lust 
To  struggle  life-long  for  a  crust, 
And  curse  his  getters ;  sure  the  worst 
Curst,  are  the  getters  of  the  curst. 

But  we,  who  oft  have  cursed  our  sires, 
Are  here,  bedevilled  by  desires. 

12 


Well .  . .  what  desires  drive  us  so? 
What  are  we  seeking?  May  we  know?' 

Then  Baltasar:  'Sir,  you  should  lead.' 

I  said :  'A  remedy  for  need  . . . 

I  seek  for  God,  that  is,  a  light 

In  life's  abominable  night. 

No  light  comes  from  the  present  party 

Of  Mithras,  Baal  and  Astarte. 

Marduk,  Shumalia,  the  Sphinx  . . . 

The  sparrow  hatches  in  their  chinks. 

Egyptian  Nilus,  Hathor,  Ptah, 

And  all  that  were  and  all  that  are, 

Are  man-made  figments,  climate-tinged, 

Appealed-to,  when  the  time's  unhinged, 

By  daftness,  with  as  much  effect 

As  flies  have,  when  the  Bird  has  pecked. 

Men  need  the  gods,  and  made  the  lot, 
The  snaky,  birdy,  thin  and  squat, 
The  bull-y,  crocodile-y,  blast-y, 
The  lame,  the  drunken  and  the  nasty, 
The  toothy,  bite-y,  smite-y,  gory, 
Also  the  lustful  and  the  whorey. 

I  ask  you,  what  of  light  we  find 
In  such  abortions  of  the  mind? 

My  own  land's  gods  survive,  being  Greek, 
And  yet  I  am  ashamed  to  speak 

13 


Of  things  that  men  believe  they  did. 
I  seek  a  god  at  present  hid. 

One,  such  a  King  above  all  Kings, 
As  shall  inspire  splendid  things, 
A  ruler  putting  down  all  crime, 
A  bringer  of  a  golden  time, 
A  spirit  splendid  with  such  state 
That  every  man  will  imitate 
With  perfectness  in  all  things  done. 
A  soul  in  people  like  the  sun. 
A  glory  for  whom  men  will  die, 
A  Light  that  puts  all  darkness  by. 

That  star  there,  that  we  stopped  to  see, 
These  idiots  say  that  this  is  He, 
Himself,  in  triumph,  coming  soon, 
Riding  in  fire  on  a  moon  . . . 

Myself,  I  think  some  burning  gas 
Makes  Heaven  brighter  than  it  was 
But  still,  in  this  last  month,  the  word 
Has  spread,  however  much  absurd, 
That  it  is  He,  and  that  the  wise 
Must  follow  where  His  banner  flies. 
So  here  I  am,  and  here  are  we, 
Soon  we  shall  come  upon  the  sea 
And  have  to  turn :  perhaps  by  then 
The  gas  will  be  burnt  out  agen. 

It  is  not  wholly  folly,  this. 

In  every  crowd  some  wisdom  is. 

H 


On  every  road  by  which  we  pass 
Are  some  who  seek  this  burning  gas. 
My  hope  is,  that  among  them,  one 
Will  know  a  god  who's  like  a  Sun, 
A  god  transfiguring,  creating, 
Impelling  and  illuminating ; 
One  like  all  beauty,  life  and  power, 
At  once  a  stem  and  fruit  and  flower, 
One  that  will  make  men  men  indeed, 
And  clear  man's  sorry  soil  of  weed. 

If  such  a  god  be  known  and  named, 
His  truths  shall  surely  be  proclaimed. 
I  will  proclaim  them,  though  they  bring 
Upheaval  both  to  realm  and  King. 
No  matter :  such  a  god  will  mend 
Man's  fdthy  errors  in  the  end. 

Such  is  my  seeking:  what  is  yours? 

Baltasar 

This  world  of  ailments  needing  cures 
Seeks  deities  whose  ministries 
May  bring  an  ending  to  disease. 
Perhaps,  if  this  new  star  be  sign 
Of  change  that  deathless  wills  design, 
Some  such  divineness  may  be  brought 
As  living  faith  in  human  thought. 
That  would  change  much. 

The  god  you  seek 
Would  crack  the  systems  grown  antique, 

15 


But  might  he  not  be  too  much  male? 
If  strength  and  force  turn  many  a  scale, 
Women  and  children,  too,  demand 
A  guiding  friend  and  helping  hand. 
Perhaps  your  manly  god  might  seem 
Too  like  the  pious  Spartan's  dream, 
Sublime  for  spearmen,  dogs  and  brothers, 
But  not  for  girls  and  nursing  mothers. 

But,  there,  I  come,  like  you,  to  find 
Some  vision  of  a  seeing  mind, 
Who  shows  a  way  that  men  may  tread 
Not  broken-hearted  by  the  dead, 
Not  blind  to  what  to  do,  not  mean, 
Not  snarling,  hating  and  unclean  . . . 
Not  dangerous  with  sex  and  sect, 
Nor  all  astray  with  intellect. 
I  hope  to  find  a  lighted  way 
And  lead  men  to  it,  if  I  may. 

Melchior 

And  you,  Sir;  may  we  learn  from  you? 

Gaspar 
I  seek  for  hope  to  make  anew 
My  purpose,  that  a  death  has  killed. 

Most  human  lives  are  unfulfilled, 
All  human  lives  have  something  fine, 

16 


Some  touch  of  what  we  call  divine, 

The  men,  a  power,  strength  or  art, 

Women,  a  nobleness  of  heart. 

This  godlike  quality  survives 

(Surely  it  must)  our  dying  lives. 

Is  it  not  God,  or  all  that  is 

God,  in  this  sea  of  miseries? 

In  praying  God,  do  we  not  pray 

To  souls  beloved  gone  away, 

Who  tried,  with  unsuccess,  at  things 

Vital  to  men  (the  art  of  Kings), 

Who  bore,  with  courage  and  with  beauty, 

The  hatefulness  of  pain  and  duty? 

Do  not  men  think  this  star  that  burns 

Is  rested  spirit  that  returns, 

To  cleanse  and  vivify  and  change 

This  life  that  silly  creeds  derange?' 

Into  the  tent,  there  sprang  a  stranger 
The  Doctor  who  had  passed  us  by. 

The  Doctor 
Captains,  that  woman  is  in  danger. 
Heart  failure,  cold,  and  like  to  die  . . . 
Can  you  spare  wine  and  blankets? 

Melchior 

Take . . 

The  Doctor 
My  thanks,  for  the  poor  creature's  sake. 

17 


Melchior 

Can  we  do  more? 

The  Doctor 

Yes:  if  tilings  mend. 
Pray  that  good  spirits  may  attend. 

Melchior 

Call  to  us,  if  you  need:  we'll  hear. 

The  Doctor 
Thank  God,  you  happened  to  be  near. 

Baltasar 

Alack,  what  avenues  of  fear 

Our  mothers  tread  alone,  to  bring 

Man's  destiny  to  sot  and  King. 

Gaspar 
What  agonies  of  life  they  take 
For  thoughtless  men's  unworthy  sake. 

Melchior 

Yes ;  and  what  agonies  they  make. 

They  bring  the  children  without  whom 
This  earth  would  be  the  last  man's  tomb. 
A  manless  stretch  of  Paradise, 
The  grass,  and  happy  dogs,  and  flies. 
But  women  propagate  and  breed 
This  squalor,  mixed  of  lies  and  greed, 

18 


This  infamy  of  Man,  whose  lot, 
Condemns  whoever  was  begot 
To  grieve,  blaspheme  and  sin,  till  death 
Annuls  his  pestilence  of  breath. 
However  much  men  mar  or  mend, 
Death  brings  them  to  an  utter  end, 
An  end  to  doing  good  and  sinning. 
Whose  primal  error  was  beginning. 

Gaspar 

I  cannot  think  the  lovely  die. 

Melchior 

Ah,  friend,  the  sweetness  of  a  lie, 
May  soothe  a  broken  heart,  indeed, 
But  the  dead  cease,  and  the  hearts  bleed. 
Even  my  own  has  sorely  bled 
Seeking  the  dear  beloved  dead; 
But  no  least  comfort  came,  or  comes. 
The  dead  have  had  their  martyrdoms, 
Leave  them  at  peace. 

I  knew  one  case 
And  only  one,  in  any  place, 
Of  one  dead  creature  who  contrived 
A  way  of  shewing  he  survived. 
The  thing  they  call  a  ghost,  or  sprite, 
Who  roams  the  owl-time  and  at  night. 
There  was  a  mongrel  robber-chief, 
Bandit,  and  horse-and-cattle  thief, 
Ruffian  at  any  sort  of  crime 
I'  the  west  there,  in  my  younger  time. 

19 


I  sent  out  men  who  broke  the  gang. 
This  robber-chief  they  did  not  hang 
But  cut  his  head  off,  there  and  then. 

That  fellow's  spirit  haunted  men. 
Just  by  the  grave  at  which  he  died, 
He  would  jump  up  at  even-tide, 
His  cut  head  tucked  beneath  his  arm. 
It  caused  the  passers  much  alarm, 
This  hopper  with  a  headless  neck, 
This  cock  who  could  no  longer  peck, 
But  still  could  terrify,  and  worse. 
His  ghost  became  a  public  curse; 
Men  would  not  use  the  road  at  night, 
For  many  folk  had  seen  the  sight 
Or  swore  they  had,  or  thought  they  had. 
I  promised  them  I'd  lay  the  lad. 

Mind:  I  supposed  that  tricks  were  played 

By  urchins  making  folk  afraid. 

The  half-seen,  in  uncertain  light, 

Is  all  the  ghost  in  human  fright 

And  boys,  I  judged,  caused  this  half-seen. 

Well .  . .  off  I  travelled  to  the  scene, 

A  barren  trackway  on  the  wold, 

With  twisted  thorn-trees  bleak  with  cold. 

No  ambush  there  for  boys  at  all, 

A  grave  beside  a  ruined  wall, 

And  just  the  wind  and  loneliness, 

Where  justice  had  killed  wickedness. 

20 


I  stood  at  sentry-go  all  night 
Three  nights  together  on  the  site, 
Full-moony  nights,  but  no  ghost  hopped. 

I  said  'His  frolics  shall  be  stopped 
This  spiritual  frog  shall  end.' 

I  dug  him  up,  that  buried  friend, 
There  lay  he,  skull  within  his  arm. 
I  said  'You'll  do  no  further  harm.' 
I  had  him  down  the  hill  perforce, 
Let  build  a  mighty  heap  of  gorse 
And  burned  him  into  ash,  and  shook 
The  ashes  in  a  running  brook. 

I  had  his  grave  filled-in  and  fire 
Burned  on  it  in  another  pyre. 

Then  I  proclaimed:  'After  today, 
Man,  woman,  child,  who  dares  to  say 
That  she,  he,  it,  saw  this  thing  hop, 
Shall  shackle  to  a  post  and  stop 
One  week  on  what  was  once  his  grave. 

I  heard  no  more  about  the  Knave. 

That's  the  one  instance  known  to  me 
Of  corpse  who  somehow  seemed  to  be 
Alive  in  some  way,  although  dead, 
I  quenched  his  shadow-life  by  dread. 

21 


To  me,  the  Dead  are  gone ;  but  you  .  .  . 
So  young,  so  gallant,  haply  knew 
Some  unbelievable  sweet  scrap 
Of  soul  surviving  mortal  hap? 
Has  such  a  blessing  come  to  you? 

Gaspar 

Ah,  never,  never  any  sign 
Able  to  calm  this  grief  of  mine. 
But  was  there  not  that  King  of  Spain 
Whose  dear  dead  Queen  came  back  again? 
In  her,  he  had  lost  everything, 
For  who  is  lonely  as  a  King? 
His  agony  of  grief  so  sped 
It  called  his  love  back  from  the  dead. 
She  came  again,  white,  sad  and  dim; 
Men  saw  her  bless  and  talk  to  him. 
More  than  a  year  she  lingered  so, 
Saying  what  none  will  ever  know, 
Keeping  him  sane,  keeping  him  willed, 
To  govern,  though  his  heart  was  killed. 
Then,  presently,  she  was  not  there, 
There  was  no  shadow  in  the  air, 
That  mist  of  woman  was  no  more. 

Death  is  a  grim  dividing  door 
That  shuts  and  keeps  its  tenants  fast. 

He  knew  her  presence  could  not  last, 
And  trembled  (as  they  say)  for  dread 
Lest  he  were  prisoning  the  dead, 
Keeping  her  here  on  earth  un-free. 

22 


No  spirit  has  appeared  to  me. 

Baltasar 

A  dead  friend  came  to  me  in  dream. 
It  was  his  very  self,  I  deem 
No  phantom,  but  his  living  light. 
He  shone  upon  me  in  the  night. 

Zeus  has  decreed  that  I  must  guide 
Some  thousands  in  a  country-side, 
Rough  mountaineers  and  sea-port  men, 
Tillers  and  farmers  of  the  glen, 
A  rude  lot,  poorly  kinged,  Zeus  knows. 

Two  years  past,  pestilence  arose, 

And  like  a  mountain-fire  spread. 

Whole  villages  were  stricken  dead 

And  no  drug  served,  and  no  man  knew 

What  caused  this  running  thing  that  slew, 

For  it  was  swift  death,  riding  post 

As  secret  as  a  daylight  ghost, 

And  fataller  than  war,  or  flood. 

The  poison  got  into  the  blood 

How,  no  man  knew ;  and  then  you  died. 

I  being  but  their  servant,  tried 
All  things  that  might  perhaps  avail, 
But  death  on  death  I  saw  them  fail ; 
No  drug  seemed  even  to  delay 
The  power  of  the  thing  to  slay. 
So  there  I  rode  the  land,  and  said 

23 


*0  Zeus,  put  me  among  the  dead, 
For  since  I  cannot  guard  my  trust, 
I  am  but  dust,  unroyal  dust, 
Unlit  by  a  divine  bright  gleam.' 

Then  in  the  night  there  came  a  dream 
My  friend  appeared,  in  light,  and  said : 
'By  tainted  water  this  is  spread. 
The  upper  springs  are  pure:  drink  those.' 

He  seemed  within  a  golden  rose 
Made  out  of  life;  he  smiled;  he  drew 
Back  to  the  rose's  deepest  hue, 
And  there  was  I  alone,  but  knowing 
Salvation  from  his  spirit's  showing. 

I  called  out  guards :  I  sent  out  word : 

Ere  the  cocks  crowed  or  pigeons  stirred, 

All  water-points  were  sentinelled. 

From  that  bright  dream  the  curse  was  quelled. 

Vagrants  had  fouled  the  duct  that  brings 
Our  waters  from  the  central  springs. 
The  upper  springs  were  not  involved. 
My  peoples'  problem  was  resolved. 
That  my  friend  helped  me,  I  am  certain. 
What  we  call  Death  is  but  a  curtain. 

Melchior 

Yet,  out  of  all  Earth's  millions  gone 
What  stands  for  men  to  build  upon? 

24 


We  three  all  long  for  God:  and  yet 
What  living  presence  have  we  met 
To  show  that  such  exist  and  are? 
Not  yonder  very  splendid  star, 
But  known,  and  here? 

I  maintain,  none. 
I  know  I  never  met  with  one 
Save  Destiny,  that  gave  me  rule 
Over  my  land  of  freak  and  fool 
A  duty  that  I  try  to  do ; 
Has  any  god  appeared  to  you? 

Baltasar 

No.  I  have  sought,  but  never  found. 
I  visit  consecrated  ground 
In  shrines  and  temples,  and  have  heard 
An  oracle's  ambiguous  word; 
And  heard  a  pythoness  declare 
That  spirits  were  in  presence  there, 
And  that  the  spirits  present  said 
That  they  were  spirits  of  men  dead. 
And  some  of  these  have  seemed  to  me 
Deceivers  of  credulity. 

But  faith  remains  that  in  the  end 
The  curtain  of  our  night  will  rend, 
And  light  illumine  what  is  dark. 
Light  IS,  for  we  perceive  a  spark  . . . 
And  are  the  better  men  thereby, 
Myself  am  better,  even  I .  .  . 
I  have  learned  patience ;  perhaps  more. 

25 


I  have  met  nothing  to  adore 

Seen  neither  Light  nor  Shape,  and  heard 

No  Wisdom's  overwhelming  Word 

Nor  quaked  with  any  special  grace 

In  any  consecrated  place. 

But  yet  at  times,  in  hills,  at  springs, 

A  hint  of  everlasting  things 

Is  present,  somehow,  in  the  scene, 

As  though  immortal  King  or  Queen 

Were  there,  remote,  but  yet  akin 

And  shedding  fuller  life  therein. 

Many  have  felt  this,  far  from  men, 

Beside  the  water  in  a  glen 

Where  none  but  deer  or  curlews  drink. 

Or  at  a  precipice's  brink 

Where  the  hawk  mews  and  the  wind  whistles 

And  sheep  skulls  glare  in  the  grass  bristles. 

I  know  not  what  to  call  the  sign 

Save  evidence  of  the  divine. 

Many  such  spots  still  have  a  shrine 

And  some,  great  temples,  sought  by  many. 

But  you,  Sir,  named  one  godlike  thing, 
The  Destiny  that  made  you  King. 
You  feel  that  some  Divine  Hand  sets 
All  palms  and  crowns  and  coronets. 
I  think  it ;  and  that  such  Hand  gave 
The  iron  fettering  the  slave, 
The  sex  all  have  to  learn  to  bear  .  .  . 
And  the  time  when,  and  the  place  where. 

26 


I  think  it . .  .  and  admitting  this .  .  . 

Destiny  governs  all  that  is . . . 

But  what  it  is  that  governs  so 

I  do  not  know,  but  long  to  know  .  . . 

I  think  . . .  our  younger  friend,  should  see 

More  clearly  into  Life  than  we  .  . . 

What  Divine  Voice  has  he  heard  speak? 

Gaspar 
In  truth,  it  is  not  God  I  seek 
But  Her  who  once  was  linked  to  me 
By  heart-annulling  Destiny. 
That  Destiny  most  surely  spoke 
The  day  my  love  for  her  awoke. 
It  will  seem  childish,  spoken  here. . . 
Within  my  heart  a  voice  spoke  clear 
Bidding  me  buy  a  colt  for  sale. 

No  man  so  sternly  told  could  fail 

To  follow  the  command :  I  bought .  . . 

The  Fortune  of  my  Life  was  wrought 

In  that  one  purchase,  Love,  Fame,  Power. 

All  from  five  seconds  in  an  hour 

Not  otherwise  a  startling  thing. 

It  brought  me  love,  made  me  a  King, 
Crowned  me  in  all  ways  with  success. 
The  horse  was  Fortune's  self  no  less . . . 
I  rode  him  in  the  Sacred  Race, 
Along  the  Old  Gods'  trysting-place, 
Through  Seven  Fires  and  won,  and  won. 

27 


But  this  would  weary  everyone. 
I  say  'A  Spirit  spoke  to  me 
Knowing  that  certain  things  would  be 
The  greater  things  of  Destiny, 
Therefore  a  God'. 

No  other  sign 
Of  God  has  moved  this  heart  of  mine. 
Their  lives  must  be  remote  from  ours 
Where  autumn  never  dims  the  flowers 
And  sin  is  not,  and  Death  is  not. 
Why  should  they  heed  our  mortal  lot? 

What  can  we  be  to  spirits  pure 
Who  know  the  future  and  endure? 
Nothing  I  fear :  it  is  too  plain. 
Yet  He  that  spoke  may  speak  again.' 

Melchior 

So,  Sir,  you  won  the  Sacred  Race  . . .  ? 
I  watched  that  once,  by  Zeus's  grace, 
There  on  the  downs  where  skylarks  sing 
And  burning  gorse-flakes  fly  and  sting. 
An  old  religious  rite  still  done 
Riding  through  fire  . . .  and  you  won? 
Won,  on  a  god-appointed  horse. 

We  touch  some  transitory  force, 
As  it  appears :  your  friend  who  told 
How  running  Death  could  be  controlled 
Your  god  there  at  the  sale  who  knew 
What  that  one  colt  might  be  to  you. 

28 


And  my  old  thief  whom  I  made  stop 

Living  and  when  he  used  to  hop. 

You  have  been  luckier  than  I: 

I  have  no  answer  to  the  why, 

No,  not  to  any  of  the  whys 

That  mortal  sorrows  emphasize 

Or  mortal  madnesses  inflame. 

To  me,  Life  cannot  be  a  game 

Played  by  a  god  or  by  the  dead; 

It  is  a  kennel  of  beasts  fed 

By  rapine  of  their  fellow-beasts; 

It  is  a  pan  of  working  yeasts 

That  never  will  be  bread  or  food  . .  . 

And  any  pestilence  that  strewed 

The  lot  as  corpses  everywhere, 

I  say,  would  make  the  world  more  fair. 

Let's  see  the  Night,  now  men  are  still.' 

The  water  lapsed  over  the  sill, 
And  in  some  roost  or  pigeon-loft 
A  bird  gurgled  and  fluttered  soft; 
The  night  was  drawing  to  a  close. 
And  overhead  a  murmur  rose 
Of  migrant  birds  upon  the  wing 
Returning  north  with  twittering. 
Steps  sounded  on  the  cobbled  lane. 

*I  am  the  Doctor  come  again,' 

A  voice  said :  'You  have  saved  two  lives. 

Observe  the  strangeness  life  contrives 

29 


Blind  darkness,  and  a  girl  in  need 
Of  vital  stimulant  at  speed 
And  unexpected  you  at  hand. 
And  but  for  you  the  running  sand 
Would  have  run  out :  they  would  be  dead. 

Your  things  are  in  the  cattle-shed, 

The  Nurse  will  see  that  they're  returned. 

Well,  truly,  one  thing  I  have  learned 
The  Unexpected  Way  is  Fate's.' 

Melchior 

My  friend,  the  strangers  at  the  gates 
Are  often  Gods,  so  proverbs  say. 
Sit,  Sir,  and  drink.' 

The  Doctor 

'I  cannot  stay, 
Two  minutes;  but  I'll  sit  and  drink. 
You  haven't  been  abed,  I  think 
And  now:  it's  nearly  morning:  lo, 
The  valley  cocks  begin  to  crow.' 

And  surely  from  the  distance  dim 
The  valley-farm  cocks  answered  him, 
Faint  challenges,  and  hopes  that  said 
'The  morning's  coming :  who's  afraid? 
We'll  be  let  out:  we  can  go  scrout 
The  dew-drops  from  the  clover-sprout. 
And  peck  the  little  things  we  scare.' 

30 


Then  Baltasar :  'The  woman  there  . .  . 
Has  she  no  home?  Has  she  no  friends?' 

The  Doctor 
'Nothing  but  what  her  Fortune  sends. 
That  (having  sent  you)  must  be  good. 
If  you  could  spare  a  little  food 
It  might  be  kind. 

Baltasar  Some  shall  be  sent. 

Melchior 
Doctor,  before  you  reached  the  tent 
We  talked  of  gods  and  deaths  and  lives 
And  whether  anything  survives 
The  worn-out  perished  mortal  man. 

The  Doctor 
I  hope :  but  know  not  how  it  can. 
Though  men  are  animals,  their  minds 
Have  powers  not  of  beastly  kinds 
There  is  some  essence  that  is  strange. 
Possibly  that  survives  the  change. 
My  task  concerns  what  lives  and  dies. 

Melchior 
The  maggots  and  more  loathsome  flies. 

The  Doctor 
Not  that,  where  governments  are  wise, 
Some  prudent  states  have  given  heed 
To  who  shall  be  allowed  to  breed. 


3i 


As  yet,  they  never  breed  for  sense, 
Only  for  troops  for  their  defence. 

Baltasar 

Perhaps  good  animals  at  least. 

The  Doctor 
A  sort  of  strong  blind  stupid  beast 
Who  credits  what  the  statesmen  say, 
And  can  endure  and  will  obey. 

Melchior 

A  better  type  perhaps  than  that 

You  saved,  the  homeless  woman's  brat. 

The  Doctor 
Why,  even  as  to  that,  who  knows? 
What  governs  dice-cubes  in  the  throws? 
Not  what  the  will  wills  or  mind  meant 
But  Fate,  or  Chance  her  instrument. 
That  this  child's  Fate  is  good  is  clear 
From  being  born  when  you  were  near : 
Without  that,  who  can  say  indeed? 

But  here's  the  morning :  I  must  speed, 
There  is  a  man  in  pain,  out  west, 
I  must  attempt  to  give  him  rest 
Before  my  morning  cases  call. 

Farewell,  and  thank  you  one  and  all. 

32 


It  would  be  kind  if  you  could  spare 
Some  something  to  the  woman  there. 
The  Nurse  is  there:  the  best  Nurse  known.' 

Melchior  resumes 

At  this,  he  left  us  three  alone, 
And  passed  over  the  grass  away. 
'Ah,  friends,'  I  said,  'It's  nearly  day. 
What  would  you  care  for?  Bed  and  rest?' 
They  said,  to  join  their  men  were  best, 
But  thanked  me,  and  prepared  to  go. 

I  said  'Wait  still,  until  we  know 
About  this  woman  and  have  left 
Some  havings,  since  she  seems  bereft. 
The  gold-dust,  spice  and  gums  we  bring, 
In  these  wild  parts  buy  anything 
Let  us  bring  some  of  those  to  her.' 

So,  with  some  gum  and  gold  and  myrrh, 

Some  woollens,  honey,  eggs  and  cake, 

And  that  dried  meat  the  westerns  make, 

We  started  for  the  cattle-byre. 

The  Nurse  had  lit  a  little  fire, 

She  saw  us  coming,  checked,  and  cried  .  . . 

The  Nurse 
'Let  the  two  sleep,  O  Kings,  abide. 
But  carol,  for  the  spirit  tells 
That  in  eternity  the  bells 
Are  ringing  for  this  morning's  sake. 

33 


Another  King  has  come  to  take 
Life's  bitter  death  to  help  mankind.' 

Melchior 

Nurse,  we  are  three  astray  and  blind, 

Seeking  a  thing  we  hope  to  find 

But  have  not  yet  found:  never  may  . . . 

Now  that  poor  woman  in  the  hay, 

All  harrowed  into  death's  door  thus, 

Is  somehow  linked  to  all  of  us. 

We  would  leave  gifts  for  when  she  wakes 

For  the  child's  and  for  her  suffering's  sakes. 

May  she  hope  on :  I  leave  this  gold. 

Baltasar 

May  good  hope  keep  both  child  and  her  .  . . 
I  leave  them  this  all-buying  myrrh. 

Gaspar 
May  she  hope  on  ...  I  give  alone 
What  one  had  given  had  she  known. 

Melchior 

Then,  as  we  turned,  my  batman  brought 
A  heap  of  things,  and  said  'We  thought . . . 
. . .  The  fellows  thought,  my  lord,  that  these 
Might  bless  them  with  a  little  ease. 

The  Nurse 
She'll  thank  you  all;  more  than  you  know. 

34 


Melchior 

We  bowed  and  as  we  turned  to  go 

A  breathing  of  the  morning  took 

The  mist  above  the  little  brook, 

And  shook  the  dew  drops  from  the  branch. 

The  eastward  sky  began  to  blanch, 

The  budded  beech  became  distinct 

Like  script  on  parchment  sharply  inkt. 

The  peacocks  in  their  splendour  flew 

Into  the  grass  flashing  the  dew, 

And  then  a  bell  began,  and  then 

The  footsteps  of  the  bakers'  men, 

The  jangle  of  the  milking-pails. 

And  we,  who  had  to  ride,  rode  on, 

From  Ilion  to  Avalon, 

To  cities  promised  from  towns  gone. 


35 


THE  SONG  OF  GASPAR 

THE  YOUNGEST   OF  THE 
THREE  KINGS 

I  saw  two  towers  in  the  light 
Heaped  with  the  apples  of  delight 
All  burning  gold; 

And  SHE,  of  excellence  untold 
In  robes  unutterably  bright 
Stepped  live,  stepped  bold. 

O  Excellence,  unthanked,  unsung, 
Come  from  Eternity  to  tongue 
What  cannot  die, 
Love  indestructible,  youth-young, 
Earth-deep,  Heaven-high. 


36 


OSSIAN 

PART  I 

Finns  Wooing 
Grania 

All  this  began  because  Firm  wished  to  wed. 

He  was  lonely,  old  and  covetous  of  power, 

He  dreamed  of  empire  with  himself  as  head, 

With  eastern  Eire  pledged  to  him  as  dower. 

Birth,  Beauty,  Wit . . .  which  girl 

Of  all  the  land's  princesses  was  the  flower? 

'Grania/  men  said,  'the  High-King  Cormac's  Daughter.' 

Such  was  the  human  prelude  to  the  slaughter. 

So,  calling  Ossian,  his  wondrous  Son, 
And  Dermot,  noblest  of  his  men  at  arms, 
He  said  'Go  see  if  Cormac  may  be  won 
To  grant  this  Princess  of  so  many  charms 
To  me,  to  be  my  Wife. 
Dower  of  money  down  and  dairy  farms, 
That  may  be  settled  later  as  is  due, 
I  shall  not  care  if  he  refuses  you, 

But  should  care,  if  I  went  myself  to  ask 
And  were  refused;  so  go,  and  put  the  case.' 
Ossian  and  Dermot  went  upon  their  task 

37 


To  High-King  Cormac  in  his  dwelling-place 
On  Tara's  watch-tower-hill. 
And  near  the  hill  a  Lady  of  great  grace 
Rode  to  them,  saying,  'Ossian,  son  of  Finn, 
May  Fortune  bless  your  plea,  lest  ills  begin.' 

She  was  a  Princess,  beautiful  and  young, 

With  wreaths  of  gold-leaf  wound  about  her  hair, 

Her  gladness  cannot  well  be  told  by  tongue 

Nor  in  her  heart  what  depths  of  goodness  were. 

No  wisdom  such  as  hers 

Comes  often  here  as  mortals  were  aware, 

She  rode  an  earth-disdaining  horse  whose  pride 

Showed  in  each  step  that  such  a  Queen  should  ride. 

Then  Ossian,  thanking  her,  replied  'Princess, 

If  you  are  Grania,  as  I  surely  deem, 

May  every  happy  Fortune  deeply  bless 

My  Father's  proffer  for  your  heart's  esteem, 

And  as  my  Father's  Son, 

I  say  your  beauty  is  beyond  all  dream, 

And  we,  O  Grania,  will  obey  your  rule 

You  being  crowned  as  Queen  to  Finn  MacCoul.' 

'Ossian,'  she  said,  'Grania  is  on  the  Hill, 
Ride  forward  to  King  Cormac  with  your  suit, 
May  ever-changing  Fortune  have  the  will 
To  bring  this  plea  of  Finn's  to  happy  fruit. 
At  present,  Fortune  sways, 
The  oracles  are  dumb,  the  seers  mute, 
Myself  am  Niamh  of  the  Glittering  Plain. 
Our  ways  are  one,  and  we  shall  meet  again. 

38 


Then  west  away  she  rode,  and  Dermot  said  .  . . 
*  Well,  we  have  seen  a  wonder,  you  and  I. 
I  thought  her  Grania,  too,  that  lovely  maid, 
A  body  and  soul  to  measure  beauty  by.' 
Then,  entering  the  Court, 
They  pled  their  cause,  and  Cormac  made  reply. 
'It  is  for  Grania's  self  to  choose  her  mate. 
Finn  shall  be  welcome  here  to  try  his  fate.' 

With  banners  and  with  gifts  Finn  took  his  guard 
And  Tara-wards  he  rode  to  see  and  woo. 
Ossian  was  with  him,  Dermot,  Fand,  the  bard, 
Osgar,  the  loveliest  lad  earth  ever  knew, 
Bald  Conan,  the  sharp-tongued, 
Great-hearted  Goll,  whom  later  the  sands  slew, 
Swift-footed  Caoilte,  too,  yet  all  attest 
That  Dermot,  nicknamed  Love-Spot,  was  the  best. 

To  Cormac's  palace  all  were  welcomed-in. 

Grania,  the  love-bird,  from  her  golden  cage, 

Earth's  loveliest  woman  stepped  to  talk  to  Finn, 

An  old  gray  warrior  more  than  thrice  her  age, 

Who  sought  her  as  a  prop 

In  cunning  schemes  he  plotted  to  engage. 

All  this  she  pondered  as  the  harps  were  loud, 

And  Finn  embraced  her,  watched  by  all  the  crowd. 

And  at  the  feast  that  followed,  though  her  smile 
Was  all  for  Finn,  her  thoughts  were  otherwhere, 
Westward  from  Tara  many  a  stony  mile 
With  other  love  than  veteran  with  white  hair 
Grown  old  in  blood  and  drink. 


39 


Behind  her  smile  an  evil  did  prepare. 

Niamh  among  the  guests,  who  watched  her  well, 

Half  judged  her  purpose,  so  the  stories  tell. 

When  loving-cups  had  passed  and  singings  ceased, 

And  dying  torches  marked  the  evening's  end, 

And  all  the  royalties  had  left  the  feast, 

Niamh  drew  near  to  Ossian,  saying  *  Friend, 

Forgive,  if  I  beseech  . . . 

Most  perilously,  evil  things  impend. 

You,  as  Finn's  son,  may  stop  their  making  head.' 

'Lady,  I'll  try  . . .  what  is  it  that  you  dread?' 

'Would  that  Fate  told,'  she  cried,  'But,  O,  contrive 
That  Dermot  be  away  from  here  tonight. 
Nothing  but  this  will  keep  him  man  alive. 
Send  him  with  message  out  of  speech  and  sight.' 
'Conan  commands  the  guard, 
I,  as  Finn's  son,  have  neither  weight  nor  right .  .  . 
To  order  anyone  to  go  or  stay 
Ossian  replied,  'Ask  Conan  . . .  Conan  may.' 

But  here  the  Warden  of  the  High-King's  State 

Cried  the  command:  'Fianna,  mount  the  guard 

Till  dawn  tomorrow  beside  Tara  Gate.' 

All  hurried  thence,  the  heavy  gates  were  barred, 

The  rampart  lanterns  lit. 

The  quiet  of  the  midnight  many-starred 

Set  all  asleep  save  Conan's  little  band, 

Dermot,  the  Ossians,  Caoilte,  Goll  and  Fand. 

40 


These  in  the  guard-house  just  within  the  wall, 

Arranging  two  to  wake  and  five  to  rest, 

The  seven  settled  ready  for  a  call, 

To  sleep  or  play  the  chess-game  as  seemed  best. 

A  lantern  lit  the  room. 

The  moon  and  stars  went  down  into  the  west. 

Upon  the  rampart-top  the  leisured  feet 

Of  sentries  crunched  the  gravel  on  their  beat. 

And  then,  as  Ossian  wondered  by  the  gate 
What  horror,  of  all  horrors,  could  impend 
On  Dermot,  least  deserving  of  ill  fate, 
A  woman's  voice  cried  'May  a  very  friend 
Bid  the  night-watch  good  night?' 
And  Grania  entered,  putting  sudden  end 
To  wonder  and  to  talk,  for  no  man  there 
Had  stood  so  near  to  any  face  more  fair, 

As  exquisitely  graceful  as  a  snake 

She  glid  into  the  room  as  all  arose. 

Beauty  like  hers  made  many  hearts  to  ache 

Her  beauty  quickened  all  the  hearts  of  those, 

She  greeted  Conan  first, 

Then,  by  the  instinct  that  a  beauty  knows 

She  greeted  each  man  there,  or  asked  the  name  . . . 

And  each  man  thrilled,  but  wondered  why  she  came. 

And  Ossian,  thinking  about  Niamh's  fear 
For  Dermot' s  safety,  wondered  all  the  more  . . . 
'My  Father's  bride-to-be,  yet  coming  here  . . . 
At  midnight  to  the  watchers  at  the  door  . . . 

41 


0  exquisite  fair  face, 

Lovely  as  ever  mortal  woman  bore  . .  . 

Are  you  not  come  ill-omened  as  the  moon, 

That  shines  and  brings  the  tides  but  dwindles  soon?' 

Each  of  the  seven  guards  was  shrewdly  eyed, 
And  very  clearly  read;  she  then  said  this: 
'You,  the  Fianna,  are  the  Kingdom's  pride  .  .  . 
Your  Knightly  Order,  tell  me  what  it  is  .  . .? 
What  binds  you  each  to  each?' 
Conan  replied :  'Whatever  is  amiss 
For  King,  or  High-King,  we  are  pledged  to  try 
To  combat,  or  reclaim,  until  we  die. 

That  is  our  warrior-pledge,  or  part  at  least .  . . 

But  many  pledges  are  involved  as  well . . . 

To  share  with  all  men  present  when  we  feast . .  . 

And  Finn's  trust  never  to  betray  nor  tell . . . 

Then  at  all  times  to  aid 

The  suppliant  asking,  though  it  lead  to  hell, 

And  ever  to  help  women  in  distress. 

These  are  main  duties:  there  are  others  less/ 

She  looked  at  them  in  turn :  they  all  agreed. 

Ossian  and  Goll  suggested  lesser  things. 

Then  Grania  said:  'O  Dermot,  take  good  heed  . . . 

1  charge  you  by  your  Knightly  promisings, 
Take  me  at  once  away, 

Out  of  this  loathsome  prison  of  the  Kings 
Westward,  to  where  my  Mother's  people  dwell 
Upon  the  gate-guard  instant  horror  fell. 

42 


Dermot  stood  stunned  and  trembling :  very  white. 

'Lady'  he  said,  'that  would  be  treachery  . .  . 

Also  desertion  of  my  post  tonight .  . . 

To  take  Finn's  promised  wife  .  .  .  f  d  rather  die  .  .  . 

It  would  be  thing  so  base 

All  Eire's  stablished  state  would  fall  awry 

'I  ask  for  Knightly  service  at  your  hands 

'Princess,  I  am  Finn's  henchman,  Finn  commands 

'But,  no  ...  I  ask  of  you,'  she  answered  him. 

'A  woman  in  distress  seeks  Knightly  aid. 

In  dire  distress,  too ;  not  from  any  whim. 

You,  not  your  Captain,  took  the  oath  you  made.' 

Here  Conan  interfered  .  .  . 

'The  High  King's  orders  have  to  be  obeyed  .  .  . 

The  gates  are  shut  and  nobody  goes  through, 

Till  dawn,  that  is  the  word:  not  even  you.' 

'There  is  no  need  to  open  any  gate,' 

Grania  replied,  'there  is  a  postern  door  . . . 

Open  all  night  for  heralds  going  late  .  .  . 

I  ask  fulfilment  of  the  oath  you  swore.' 

'I  am  no  herald,  Queen,' 

Dermot  replied,  'But,  as  I  said  before, 

To  leave  this  guard-post  ere  the  night  is  through 

Would  be  desertion,  which  I  cannot  do.' 

Then  she:  'So  helping  women  in  distress, 
Is  not,  as  you  pretend,  a  binding  thing, 
But  polite  sound  that  leads  to  nothingness 
When  woman's  fate  some  savage  choices  bring 

43  d 


Then  Ossian  said :  'Princess . . . 
We,  who  serve  Finn,  are  servants  of  the  King, 
Your  Father  .  .  .  what  you  ask  confounds  us  all. 
What  you  suggest  may  make  the  Kingdom  fall. 

Conan  commands  us  here  .  .  .  Will  Conan  guide? 

Is  Dermot  by  his  promise  bound  to  go? 

It  is  no  petty  matter  to  decide, 

But  over-fraught  with  death  and  overthrow. 

In  either  way,  disgrace 

And  shattering  of  the  order  that  we  know  .  .  . 

Not  Conan  only  ...  let  a  vote  go  round.' 

Then  Conan  said :  'Dermot  is  surely  bound 

To  help  a  suppliant  woman  when  she  pleads .  . . 
But  Finn  and  High-King  Cormac  put  him  here, 
To  guard,  and  not  to  go  where  ruin  leads 
Because  a  princess  babbles  in  his  ear. 
This  is  our  Finn's  pledged  bride  .  . . 
Grania  herself;  well,  Lady,  let  us  hear 
What  extreme  anguish  prompts  you  to  ask  this, 
And  ask  of  Dermot .  .  .  tell  us  what  it  is.' 

Then  she :  'Harsh  Conan,  I  will  answer  you  .  .  . 
King  Cormac  now  lies  drunken  in  his  bed. 
When  my  sweet  Mother  died,  he  wed  anew 
And  evil  was  the  woman  whom  he  wed. 
He  now  would  marry  me 
To  Finn,  than  whom  I'd  rather  be  struck  dead. 
Finn,  someone  thrice  my  age  and  drunk  as  he  .  .  . 
That  is  some  reason,  since  you  ask  of  me. 

44 


That  I  choose  Dermot  calls  for  no  excuse  . . . 
He  comes  from  oversea :  can  you  suppose 
That  Finn's  own  sons  are  persons  I  should  choose, 
Or  Ossian's  son,  or  any  friends  of  those? 
Which  of  you  here,  save  he, 
Could  take  me  without  setting  men  at  blows 
And  setting  blood-feuds  going,  west  and  east .  .  .  ? 
No  vengeance  can  assail  his  Kin  at  least. 

Then  Conan:  'Lady,  I  have  been  Finn's  man, 
Long  years,  and  now  am  learned  in  his  ways. 
The  least  forgiving  dog  since  Earth  began. 
A  blood-feud  will  be  candle  to  the  blaze 
His  taking  you  will  cause. 
Finn's  vengeance  will  pursue  him  all  his  days, 
And  Cormac's  vengeance,  you :  I  warn  you  well 
You'll  die  in  anguish,  having  lived  in  hell. 

You,  as  a  Lady,  cannot  understand 

What  will  result  tomorrow  when  they  know. 

It  is  a  far  cry  to  your  western  land, 

A  weary  cry,  the  way  you'll  have  to  go. 

You  can  escape  from  here 

May  win  a  start  of  twenty  miles  or  so, 

Twenty  at  most ;  but  then,  the  hue  and  cry, 

With  no  escape,  will  hunt  you  till  you  die. 

Were  you  ever  a  hare  and  hunted  by  the  hounds? 
Probably  not .  .  .  you  swiftly  will  be,  then. 
And  every  King  will  beat  you  from  his  bounds, 
From  terror  of  Finn's  rage  and  Cormac's  men. 

45 


You'll  sleep  in  the  wet  wood, 
Or  freeze  with  the  drenched  heron  in  the  fen, 
And  eat  the  lucky  pickings  of  your  theft. 
The  mouse  or  fish  that  fox  or  otter  left. 

You  will  never  dare  wait  dawn  where  you  lay  down, 

Nor  eat  where  you  find  food,  nor  put  least  trust 

In  man,  woman  or  child  in  rath  or  town. 

They'll  give  you  many  a  curse,  but  never  a  crust. 

And  there  you'll  stumble  on. 

Starved,  sopping,  limping  in  the  mud  and  dust 

And  then,  the  stag-hounds  round  you,  giving  tongue, 

And  you'll  be  caught,  and  Dermot  will  be  hung.' 

'Come,  Conan,'  Dermot  said,  'we  question  now 

If  what  the  Princess  asks  me  can  be  done. 

If  that  be  voted,  I'll  consider  how. 

I  ask  a  yes  or  no  from  every  one. 

Does  my  oath  bind  me  here, 

To  help  this  Princess  lovely  as  the  sun, 

To  get  from  Tar  a  to  her  Mother's  Kin, 

Maugre  my  oaths  to  Cormac  or  to  Finn? 

You  say  I  must .  .  .  who  next,  then?  Ossian,  say.' 

'The  oath  is  crazy,'  Ossian  replied. 

'You  break  with  King  or  Woman  either  way. 

But  all  Fianna  trust  the  losing  side 

As  needing  the  help  more. 

The  woman  pleads  and  you  must  be  her  guide.' 

Then  Dermot:  'Two  agree  .  .  .  will  Fand  declare?' 

'I  never  heard  such  nonsense  anywhere,' 

46 


Fand  answered :  'We  are  henchmen  sworn  to  Finn, 
On  service  here,  as  Cormac's  special  guard. 
We  ate  his  bread,  we  have  drunken  from  his  bin, 
And  stay  here  till  the  gates  are  all  unbarred. 
We  are  sentries,  and  must  stay 
Whatever  woman  finds  the  going  hard. 
To  keep  this  gate  for  Cormac  is  our  task, 
Even  if  bright  Queen  Helen  come  to  ask.' 

Then  Dermot  turned  to  Goll:  'What  does  Goll  say?' 

'This,'  Goll  replied,  'that  had  she  asked  us  all, 

This  seven  of  us,  I'd  have  answered  'Stay  . . . 

We  seven  here  as  sentries  on  the  wall, 

As  seven  must  remain. 

But  since  to  only  one  man  comes  the  call, 

To  Dermot,  from  a  woman  in  distress, 

Dermot  must  do  it:  no  Knight  can  do  less.' 

'Three,  for,  and  one  against/  said  Dermot.  'Next, 
Caoilte;  swift-footed  Caoilte;  what  say  you?' 
"Fianna  men  keep  promise",  is  the  text, 
Keep  promise,  and  give  payment  before  due. 
But  not  when  under  arms. 
When  under  arms,  in  army  or  in  crew, 
We  obey  Finn,  or  Finn's  deputed  chief, 
No  matter  what  complainant  come  in  grief. 

Our  double-oath  is  crazy  I  agree,' 
Caoilte  added :  'Either  way  absurd, 
And  had  the  lovely  lady  turned  to  me, 
I  would  have  wakened  Finn  and  said  a  word. 


47 


But  being  asked  to  vote, 

By  every  kingly  law  I  ever  heard, 

I  say  that  we  and  Dermot  are  the  King's, 

And  stand  as  such,  whatever  siren  sings/ 

'So,'  Dermot  said,  'two  hostile,  and  three,  for  . . . 
Now,  Osgar  .  .  .  where  is  Osgar?  he  is  gone 
Conan  and  Dermot  called  him  at  the  door. 
In  middest  night  the  constellations  shone. 
'Osgar,'  his  fellows  called. 
'Osgar:  the  captain  calls  you,'  and  anon 
Osgar  came  running  back  and  entered  in. 
He  said  'Forgive  me  ...  I  have  been  to  Finn.' 

Then,  Conan,  'What  did  Finn  say  when  he  heard 

His  lovebird's  sudden  impulse  to  be  free?' 

'He  never  woke  or  understood  a  word  . .  . 

I  shook  him,  but  I  had  to  let  him  be. 

I  tried  King  Cormac  next .  . . 

King  Cormac  lies  as  stupefied  as  he. 

Being  Finn's  grandson,  Conan,  I  made  bold 

To  call  the  dog,  since  wolves  were  in  the  fold.' 

'Well,  the  dog  sleeps ;  so,  Osgar,  cast  your  vote. 
Should  Dermot  take  the  lady  west,  or  stay?' 
'The  folly  of  it  almost  chokes  the  throat 
But  Dermot's  duty  is  as  clear  as  day, 
The  suppliant  must  be  helped. 
Though  crowns  are  cast  and  Kingdoms  go  astray 
And  honour  go  dishonoured  to  the  dead.' 
'Four  for  it;  two  against  it,'  Dermot  said. 

48 


'Then,  Lady,  since  you  plead  and  votings  bid 
I  will  attempt  to  take  you  to  the  west. 
My  plans  for  getting  westward  shall  be  hid. 
I  become  host  and  you  become  my  guest. 
You  and  my  comrades  know, 
The  folly  and  the  sin  are  manifest. 
Go  to  your  herald's  postern  and  there  wait . . 
Tonight's  results  from  tangles  of  old  fate.' 

Grania  went  out,  with  anger  and  disdain, 
(Yet  in  a  triumph),  and  the  men  were  mute. 
Then,  lo,  the  Princess  of  the  Sun  again, 
Suddenly  with  them  on  a  silent  foot. 
'Ossian,'  she  said,  'O  friends .  . . 
The  evil  flower  turns  to  wicked  fruit . . . 
So  rules  the  trouble  of  the  long  ago  . . . 
And  Dermot  goes,  and  Eire's  fortunes  go. 

Alas,  Sir  Dermot,  you  will  be  pursued. 
Finn  will  destroy  you  and  re-take  his  bride. 
But  Finn,  and  all  his  Knights,  will  be  at  feud 
And  Eire's  self  their  enemy  beside. 
From  the  grey  Echtge  Hills 
To  Moyle,  streaked  with  its  many-tided  tide, 
Some  few  of  you  will  totter  in  your  pain, 
But  only  Ossian  will  know  joy  again.' 

Then  Dermot  spoke:  'O  Lady  of  Delight, 
Destiny  deals  her  unexpected  blow, 
And  fortunes  wither  as  they  do  tonight. 
Ruin  must  follow,  but  I  have  to  go. 

49 


One  thing  I  gladly  see, 
That  in  some  happy  way  I  cannot  know 
You  in  your  beauty  will  bring  Ossian  peace 
In  some  green  garden  where  all  sorrows  cease. 

But  whatsoever  fortunes  have  to  be 
I  shall  remember  you  till  fortunes  end 
And  ever  thank  you  that  you  thought  of  me. 
And  now,  O  Six,  think  kindly  of  your  friend. 
Good-night  to  you :  good-bye. 
Whatever  human  sorrows  may  impend, 
We  have  shared  happy  seasons,  you  and  I, 
And  gifts  remain  when  givers  have  passed  by. 

So,  Conan,  take  the  ring  my  father  wore, 
And  Ossian,  you,  this  golden  cloak-brooch :  Fand, 
My  hounds  at  Allan,  good  at  stag  or  boar. 
Caoilte,  my  stallion  from  the  Eastern  land. 
Osgar,  my  Eastern  mare. 
Goll,  the  great  silver  goblets  that  I  took 
Raiding  the  Roman  town  at  Roaring  Brook. 
I  bless  you  all,  soul,  body,  heart  and  hand.' 

Dismiss  me  from  the  watch,  Conan.'  'I  do,' 
Conan  replied,  'And  none  of  us  will  raise 
Outcry,  or  hand,  or  weapon  after  you, 
Whatever  either  drunken  ruler  says.' 
The  others  all  agreed. 
'It  is  a  far  cry  to  the  western  ways,' 
Said  Dermot,  pausing  at  the  opened  door, 
The  hinges  whimpered  as  the  pintles  bore. 

50 


He  looked  his  last  at  them  and  then  was  gone, 
With  quick  steps  crunching  gravel,  without  word. 
Above  the  door  they  saw  the  stars  that  shone, 
The  footsteps  lapsed  and  then  were  no  more  heard. 
The  wind  had  drawn  more  west 
And  over  Tara,  the  unlucky  bird, 
The  owl  that  tells  misfortune,  came  with  cry 
In  long  lament  for  someone  soon  to  die. 


PART   II 

The  Breaking  of  the  Fianna 
Ossians  Going 

Disaster  followed  fast  on  the  disgrace. 
Finn,  waking  from  his  drug  in  early  day, 
Called  for  his  famous  staghounds  and  gave  chase, 
Their  bell-notes  rang  along  the  western  way. 
'Bring  Grania  home,'  Finn  cried, 
But  if  you  come  on  Dermot,  never  slay  . . . 
Bring  him  to  me  alive,  and  men  shall  see 
What  comes  to  Body-Guards-Men  false  to  me.' 

Grania  soon  sickened  of  the  hunted  life, 
Riding  and  starving,  sleeping  in  the  rain ; 
She  rode  to  Finn,  who  took  her  for  his  wife, 
No  Body-Guards-Man  spoke  to  her  again. 
And  Dermot  Finn  beguiled, 
Swearing  he  knew  him  without  spot  nor  stain, 
And  evermore  would  have  him  as  a  friend, 
Then  had  him  gashed,  and  mocked  him  at  his  end. 

5i 


All  the  Fianna  brothers'  hearts  were  broken  . . . 
Finn's  Sons  and  Grandson,  all  the  hearts  of  gold, 
Murmured  at  Finn,  and  savage  words  were  spoken, 
Till  Finn  was  as  a  mad  dog  uncontrolled, 
And  on  bare  Burren  Edge 
His  angers  struck  swift-footed  Conan  cold, 
With  all  Goll's  brothers,  beautiful  as  May, 
And  Goll  died  in  a  cavern  by  the  bay. 

Then  Eire's  Kings  cried:  'Let  us  make  an  end 
Of  Finn  and  all  these  murderings  of  Knights.' 
They  prepared  feasts  and  begged  him  to  attend, 
Swearing  him  peace  by  many  holy  rites. 
Finn  and  his  Kin  believed. 

They  marched  with  banners  to  these  false  delights. 
Three  days  they  feasted,  but  the  treachery  then 
Made  half  those  trusting  feasters  murdered  men. 

Finn,  with  his  best  survivors,  made  a  stand 

On  Gavra  Hill,  that  bitter  day,  in  vain : 

For  all  were  killed  except  a  tiny  band, 

Who  struggled  north  to  what  might  still  remain, 

Finn's  fief,  near  Tivera. 

Up,  under  Trostan,  in  the  blinding  rain 

Sore  wounded  Osgar,  Ossian's  princeling,  died, 

On  the  lone  moorland  where  the  curlews  cried. 

They  heaped  a  little  cairn  and  left  him  there. 
Then  down  in  the  blind  rain  and  the  floods  roaring 
They  passed  below  the  red  crags  beaten  bare 
Knee  deep  in  water  with  the  breakers  warring 

52 


They  waded  a  mad  stream, 

Finn's  River  from  the  Hooked  Mountain  pouring, 

The  heather-pasture  of  the  honey  bee, 

Then  halted,  on  the  sea-beach  near  the  sea. 

And  there,  before  them,  halted  fetlock  deep 
In  the  sea's  wash,  that  Princess  of  the  Sun 
Sat  with  bowed  head  to  see  the  heroes  weep, 
Her  stallion  mouthed  the  bubbles  as  they  spun. 
A  led  horse  at  her  side 
Whinnied  a  challenge  startling  everyone. 
The  Princess  cried  aloud:  'O  Ossian:  friend  . . . 
Take  my  love's  welcome  at  your  journey's  end. 

I  bring  a  horse  and  bid  you  come  with  me, 

Into  a  country  where  Mays  never  cease 

Where  wounds  are  healed  and  sorrow  cannot  be 

And  without  ploughing,  cornland  gives  increase, 

Where  blossom  and  fruit  form 

Together  in  an  ecstasy  of  peace 

Where  singings  never  end  nor  lovers  tire, 

I,  Niamh,  bid  you,  O  my  heart's  desire.' 

Even  her  words  seemed  to  make  Ossian  young. 
He  bade  his  friends  farewell  with  grip  of  hands. 
Sgeolan  the  staghound  whimpered  and  gave  tongue. 
Then  Ossian  crossed  the  narrow  strip  of  sands. 
'Ossian,'  we  heard  her  say, 
'Mount  and  away  to  the  Undying  Lands .  . . 
The  old  things  of  your  sorrow  have  an  end, 
Seek  new  things  with  undying  me  for  friend.' 

53 


He  mounted  the  led  stallion  of  bright  eye. 

His  hand  lay  upon  hers  upon  the  rein, 

The  horses  trod  the  air  into  the  sky, 

Their  hoofings  sparkled  in  a  fiery  lane. 

'He  is  away,'  Finn  said, 

'Eire  will  never  see  his  like  again.' 

Onward  away  the  lovers'  horses  strode. 

In  the  dimmed  west  the  evening  planet  glowed. 


PART   III 

His  coming  to  the  Country  of  the  Young 
Ossian  tells  of  his  Going 

High  up,  we  trod  the  wind  over  the  isles, 
Our  stallions  striking  sparks  out  of  the  air, 
Ocean  lay  deep  below  for  many  miles 
Above,  the  starry  universe  lay  bare. 
Niamh  and  I  alone 
Talking  or  singing,  utterly  at  one, 
Gallopped  in  ecstasies  undreamed-of  here. 
Slowly  the  darkness  became  less  austere, 
The  sun  was  rising  and  our  ride  was  done, 

And  heralds  gathered,  crying  'Niamh,  Queen 
Be  welcome  home,  dear  Lady  of  Delight . . . 
And  Ossian,  of  the  bay-leaves  ever  green, 
Be  welcome  also  to  undying  light. 

54 


Forget  Earth's  shadow  and  storm, 
Come  to  the  temple  of  undying  things, 
The  Order  of  the  priests,  the  Power  of  Kings, 
And  Beauty  undying,  perfect,  infinite.' 

0  marvellously,  the  great  temple  stood, 
So  exquisitely  ordered  and  arranged 

It  seemed  a  mind,  not  carven  stone  and  wood, 

But  intellect  from  every  doubt  estranged, 

And  in  undying  dream. 

Beside  it,  water  lapsed  over  a  fall, 

And  shone  in  pools  along  the  sunniest  wall, 

Its  wrinkling  eddies  ever  glimpsed  and  changed. 

Above  those  changing  eddies  Fortune  sat, 

Causing  Man's  lot  to  prosper  or  decline, 

As  Wisdom,  the  unerring  autocrat, 

Judged  the  allotted  hour  and  gave  sign. 

Her  glittering  rainbow  shone, 

As  ever-falling  water  caught  the  light 

The  colours  were  all  colours  and  all  bright, 

Then  dimmed,  then  seemed  to  mingle,  then  were  gone. 

At  Fortune's  sign,  Niamh  made  me  advance, 

1  knelt  to  that  dispenser  of  man's  fate, 
'Ossian,'  she  said,  'Your  soul's  inheritance 
Is,  to  be  you,  from  virtue  of  old  date; 

O  clay  with  starry  wings ; 

Here  the  stream  runs,  and  Order,  Beauty  and  Power 
Ask  for  the  Seed-Corn,  Fruit,  or  Matchless  Flower, 
I,  who  am  Fortune,  watch  the  brook  and  wait. 

55 


Look  at  the  living  water  of  the  stream, 

It  passes  and  it  changes  and  it  grows, 

From  rain-drops  to  the  turbulent  extreme 

Wherein  the  exultant  whale  his  fountain  blows 

Man  is  but  winter  rain. 

He  hurls  out  of  his  tempest  into  hell; 

The  beauty  of  the  ocean  none  can  tell. 

The  order  of  the  ocean  no-one  knows. 

But  O,  the  beauty,  the  beauty  never  dying, 
Waiting  the  seeing  heart,  the  doing  hand, 
The  eternities  in  every  instant  flying, 
The  continents  unconquered  in  the  sand 
The  singing  in  the  sky. 
The  palaces  unbuilt,  for  Kings  unborn, 
Who  yet  await  the  blowing  of  the  horn  . .  . 
That  none  can  find  unless  he  understand.' 

Then,  singing  thus,  she  turned :  Niamh  and  I 

Entered  the  temple  by  a  little  door, 

To  marvel  at  the  things  that  cannot  die 

The  souls'  adventures  worth  the  venturing  for. 

'See,'  Niamh  said,  'they  come  . . . 

These  strangers,  who  have  touched  this  land's  extreme 

Discovering  beauty  beyond  mortal  dream  .  .  . 

Listen,  the  wonder  will  be  acted  o'er 

Then  on  the  platform  watched  by  myriad  eyes 
In  the  great  arc,  one,  preluding,  declared 
How  one  abandoned  glory  to  be  wise, 
Content  with  leavings  that  the  lepers  shared. 

56 


Then,  music,  as  he  ceased, 
Brought  singers,  dancers,  showing  every  kind 
Of  earth's  delights  that  such  an  one  resigned 
Then  came  his  very  self  and  how  he  fared. 

0  marvellous  that  wandering  up  and  down 
Finding  the  nothings  to  which  all  ways  led, 
The  glory  of  Hope  on  entering  the  town, 
The  promised  gold,  achieved,  but  proven  lead. 
The  seeming  wise,  so  kind, 

The  daily  taunts,  embittering  the  nights, 
The  jealousies,  the  treasons  and  the  spites, 
The  black  despair  and  wishing  he  were  dead. 

Then,  as  I  watched,  lo,  suddenly,  the  truth 
Enlightened  him,  as  it  enlightened  me : 

1  was  received  into  the  Land  of  Youth 
All  understanding,  utter  ecstasy, 

All  music,  colour,  form, 

Niamh  and  I  were  spirits  linked  together 

With  Sun  and  Stars,  the  Seasons  and  the  Weather 

All  moods  and  modes  of  life,  earth,  air  and  sea. 

Niamh  and  I  were  one,  and  all  was  ours 
To  know  together  all  the  Kingdom  held 
Of  living,  without  bridle  on  the  powers, 
In  beauty  not  yet  carven,  sung,  nor  spelled. 
Ourselves  all  young,  young,  young  . . . 
As  music  in  a  starry  dance  intense, 
In  living  ecstasy  of  excellence. 
Enchanted  and  inspired  and  impelled. 

57 


PART  IV 


The  Country  of  the  Young 

Into  that  sunny  land  our  way  we  took, 
Each  moment  bringing  marvel  of  surprise. 
We  paused  above  the  well-spring  of  a  brook 
Under  an  elm-tree,  on  a  grassy  rise. 
The  wind-flowers  trembled  there, 
Marvellous  flowers,  blue  and  red  and  white. 
'Ossian  has  come/  they  sang,  'to  know  delight. 
Look  at  us  Ossian:  Beauty  makes  men  wise.' 

Then,  from  the  cressy  selvage  of  the  pond, 
The  tiny  frogs,  in  their  wet  dwelling  trilled 
'Niamh  and  Ossian  are  in  golden  bond  . . . 
They  could  come  swimming,  if  they  only  willed, 
Into  this  life  so  cool, 
And  hear  the  eel-fish  telling  of  the  Sea, 
A  stranger  pond  where  many  marvels  be, 
A  great  deep  hollow,  with  salt  water  filled.' 

Upon  the  budded  branchings  of  a  thorn, 

A  blackbird  sang,  'O  Ossian,  you  and  I 

Are  of  the  happiest  creatures  ever  born; 

We  sit  in  sun  and  see  the  Spring  go  by. 

Within  our  minds  a  Sun 

Bids  us  to  sing  of  love  in  the  green  wood, 

For  Spring,  and  Love,  and  Singing  are  all  good: 

They  give  the  earth  the  glory  of  the  sky.' 

58 


The  seven  spirits  of  that  April  land 

Floated  together  singing  to  our  feet, 

The  leader  bearing  brooklime  in  her  hand, 

One,  scarlet  hips,  one,  ears  of  ripened  wheat, 

One,  clover,  red  and  white, 

One,  the  white  violets,  sweeter  than  first  love, 

One,  harebells  blue  as  any  sky  above, 

One,  just  the  green  grass  that  the  horses  eat. 

'Ossian,'  they  sang,  'look  at  these  lovely  things, 
Look  closely/  So  I  looked,  and  I  perceived, 
The  marvel  of  the  rootlets'  tiny  strings 
That  work  the  magic  not  to  be  believed. 
To  draw  from  the  raw  clay 
The  unseen  tiny  nothings  that  yet  make 
(Untaught)  a  beauty  for  the  beauty's  sake 
In  the  many-flowered  marvel  million-leaved. 

O  ecstasy  on  ecstasy  that  thrilled 

That  timeless  time,  to  understand  the  seeds 

Unseen  within  the  dark,  that  yet  can  build 

Woman  for  beauty,  or  a  man  for  deeds. 

Knowledge  ran  like  the  light 

Running  across  a  field  when  clouds  are  driven, 

Ran  in  my  mind,  like  coming-in  of  Heaven, 

And  Niamh  sang  like  the  murmuring  of  reeds. 

'Ossian,'  she  sang,  'Beloved;  follow  me  . . . 
Learn  that  the  growing-place  is  very  vast . . . 
For,  though  the  land  be  bounded  by  the  sea, 
And  many  journeys  have  been  over-past, 

59 


E 


Yet  still,  beyond,  beyond, 

There  are  the  singing  circles  of  great  awe, 

The  beauty  like  a  planet  giving  law 

To  new  life  sprung  from  our  imagined  last/ 

Then,  at  her  touch,  we  were  among  the  snows, 

The  basalt  powdered  frosty,  the  green  ice, 

Piled  where  the  iceberg  from  the  glacier  goes, 

With  scarified  gripped  granites  in  its  vice. 

Eternal  silence  there, 

Save,  when,  at  iron  times  a  clangor  claps 

As  in  the  floe  another  chasm  snaps, 

Or  too  intense  a  midnight  splits  the  gneiss. 

Yet,  at  another  touch,  we  were  away, 
In  forests  seemingly  without  an  end, 
Unshedded  green-ness  in  eternal  sway, 
Eternal  murmur,  friend  to  giant  friend, 
In  language  of  old  time, 
Repeating  memories  forever  hid 
Of  what  the  dragon  and  the  mammoth  did 
Ere  conquering  man  had  any  life  to  spend. 

We  saw  the  manless  sands  under  the  sun, 
The  grass-lands  pasturing  their  multitude, 
The  rivers  where  un-numbered  salmon  run, 
And  then  a  hill-top  where  a  city  stood 
With  weather-cocks  of  gold. 
That  gleamed  like  fire  as  they  turned  and  cried 
'Ossian  has  come  among  us  with  his  bride. 
O  welcome  them  into  the  Brotherhood !' 

60 


They  bade  us  welcome  at  the  city  gate, 

No  evil  in  that  city  can  endure. 

All  lovely  things,  all  things  of  good  report 

Crown  all  its  towers,  make  all  its  bases  sure. 

*0  marvellous,'  I  cried. 

'This  is  the  city  of  our  dreams  of  old, 

The  city  in  the  west,  as  travellers  told, 

Where  the  well  of  living  wisdom  gushes  pure.' 

And  there,  again,  the  citizens  were  friends. 

So  wise  they  were  that  many  a  timeless  day 

We  talked  a  glorious  question  to  its  ends 

Till  all  but  ecstasy  was  put  away. 

Each  lovely  mind  had  light 

Not  only  to  illumine  the  theme  conned 

But  show  the  landscape  of  the  thoughts  beyond 

Where  the  spirits  of  the  stars  made  holiday. 

How  long  we  tarried  in  that  splendid  place 
I  cannot  tell,  so  tense  each  second  seemed, 
Each  man  so  wise,  each  woman  of  such  grace, 
Each  meeting  perfect  beyond  all  things  dreamed. 
But  one  day,  a  day  dawned, 
With  leaden  haze  unlike  a  morning  there, 
My  lovely  Niamh  was  not  anywhere  . . . 
No  friends,  no  city,  only  earth  that  steamed. 

It  was  not  steam,  but  smoke,  darkening  earth, 
And  then  strange  figures  with  a  stallion  came ; 
They  bitted  him,  they  buckled-in  the  girth, 
Then  turned  to  me  and  called  me  by  my  name. 

61 


'Ossian,  you  Son  of  Finn, 

See  now  the  desert  where  the  fire  burns .  . . 

This  is  the  borderland  of  no  returns: 

You  have  one  moment :  mount  and  ride  the  flame. 

I  had  no  moment,  for  the  fire  was  there, 
The  men  gone,  the  horse  shying,  the  smoke  dense, 
With  whirls  of  burning  fragments  in  the  air 
I  reached  the  saddle  as  he  bounded  thence. 
Flame  was  all  round  me,  roaring ; 
Nothing  but  fire  seemed  to  be  the  world. 
Into  its  midst  with  scorching  hair  we  hurled 
I  gallopped  amid  fire  without  sense. 

At  last,  I  fell;  and  lay;  and  then,  a  gate, 

A  city-gate  and  wall,  lofty  and  barred, 

Where  solitude  in  silence  held  her  state 

And  no  least  swallow's  cry  the  quiet  marred. 

All  fire  was  gone :  white  cloud 

Lay  at  my  feet :  the  city-gates  immense 

Moved  slowly  open :  Niamh  issued  thence. 

*  Welcome,'  she  said:  'Friend,  was  the  riding  hard?' 

She  took  my  hand  and  led  me  through  the  gates 
Into  a  town  of  palaces  and  towers 
Built  by  the  spirit's  triumph  over  fates, 
The  things  eternal  won  from  bitter  hours, 
Things  that  death  cannot  touch. 
Man's  divine  moods  had  made  that  city  fair, 
Temple  and  monument  and  city-square. 
The  city  and  its  treasures,  all  were  ours. 

62 


In  a  lily-garden  where  the  fountains  shone 
I  gazed,  I  marvelled,  and  I  understood 
Its  glory  from  the  burning  undergone. 
'This  is  the  Place  of  man's  beatitude  . .  . 
O  loveliest  Niamh,  tell .  . . 
Why  should  a  rag  like  me,  a  rat  that  dies, 
Be  with  you  thus  within  this  Paradise 

0  starry  spirit,  cloaked  in  womanhood, 

Why  should  you  bless  me,  and  who  are  you  . . .  Tell/ 

'I  am  your  Helper  stablished  from  of  old, 

So  the  bright  balances  of  Fortune  fell 

So  the  all-seeing  destinies  foretold  .  .  . 

And  this,  my  dwelling-place, 

This  is  the  City  built  in  Beauty's  praise 

By  deathless  beings  in  forgotten  days 

Who  sought  the  sunlight  in  the  bitter  cold.' 

Out  of  the  garden's  joy  a  music  rose 

Like  muted  strings,  or  breath  where  nothing  grieved, 

An  ecstasy  of  unity  with  those 

Who  sought  the  living  sunlight  and  achieved. 

Slowly  the  music  swelled 

Then  from  its  murmur  human  voices  sang 

Lifting  aloft  until  the  City  rang 

'Beauty  endures  where  Wisdom  has  believed.' 

1  cannot  guess  what  generations  passed 

In  the  dear  daylight  of  that  deathless  place, 
But  sunset  reddened  and  light  dimmed  at  last 
And  shadows  crept  to  darken  and  efface. 

63 


But  in  one  tower,  a  light 

Showed  that  a  Something  watched  if  others  slept, 
Then,  in  the  dimness  leaves  of  brightness  swept 
Like  fire-flies  or  bats  that  left  no  trace. 

What  could  they  be,  these  little  wandering  flames, 
Floating  like  leaves,  or  like  bats  beating  by, 
Will-driven  some,  or  one  with  the  wind's  aims, 
Tossed  often  into  whirls  and  lifted  high. 
They  gleamed  and  disappeared. 
What  could  they  be,  for  as  they  glittered  near 
They  seemed  to  whisper  what  I  could  not  hear 
And  as  I  did  not  heed  they  seemed  to  sigh? 

'Niamh,'  I  said,  Tor  pity,  tell  me,  then, 

What  are  these  leaves  that  seem  intent  to  speak?' 

'They  are  the  prayings  of  the  souls  alive 

Crying  in  anguish  for  the  peace  they  seek. 

This  is  where  prayings  come  . . . 

Would  you,  then,  look  at  whence  these  prayings  rise. 

You  are  advanced,  you  have  inhuman  eyes, 

You  can  now  help,  you  are  no  longer  weak. 

Look,  then,  below.' 

I  looked,  and  lo,  a  rath, 
A  hill-town,  burning,  smoking  to  the  sky, 
The  reivers  beating  cattle  down  the  path, 
The  spearmen  storming  with  the  battle-cry, 
The  warders  dead  in  flame, 
Survivors  crying  'Help',  where  no  help  was, 
Knowing  that  final  Fate  had  come  to  pass, 
The  young  to  be  enslaved,  the  old  to  die. 

64 


'Look,  then,  again' . . . 

And  lo,  a  city  sick 
With  unknown  pestilence,  her  people  dying, 
The  death-pits  heaped  with  victims,  some  still  quick, 
Women  and  children  in  the  gutters  lying. 
Children,  with  none  to  tend 
Waning,  or  being  beaten  by  the  guards, 
Who  sat  at  bonfires,  drunken,  playing  cards. 
Outside,  the  country-people  killed  the  flying. 


'Look,  then,  again' . . . 

and  lo,  the  women's  lives, 
The  desolated  ones  whose  day  was  past, 
The  broken-hearted  ones,  the  widowed  wives, 
Those  with  dead  children,  childless  and  aghast . . . 
And  then,  beyond  all  these 
All  the  bewildered  misery  of  the  ache 
Of  folly  and  frustration  and  mistake 
Before  the  life's  one  happy  breath,  the  last . .  . 


Then,  lo,  an  Irish  voice  the  silence  broke 

A  singing  from  amidst  those  wandering  fires  . . . 

Singing  a  sudden  song  that  made  me  choke, 

My  song  of  Spring  and  lovely  Spring's  desires, 

The  song  I  made  of  old 

Of  May  in  Antrim  happy  ages  since; 

Of  blossom  on  the  hawthorn,  and  the  quince, 

When  cuckoos  come  and  lambs  are  in  the  byres. 

65 


Then,  at  the  song's  end,  came  a  poet's  cry 

The  cry  of  youth  that  loves  the  spirit's  flower, 

And  follows  seeking  beauty  till  he  die, 

Seeking  in  bitter  anguish  for  the  power 

So  very  seldom  won. 

And  this  man  prayed  to  me,  whose  strivings  seemed 

So  paltry  to  the  glories  I  had  dreamed; 

He  prayed  to  me  in  his  despairing  hour. 

*0,  Ossian,  help  me  to  attain,  like  you, 

The  power  to  evoke  in  mortal  minds 

The  quiet  at  the  dropping  of  the  dew; 

The  belling  of  the  red  stags  for  the  hinds 

On  Trostan  of  the  mists; 

The  hint  of  what  it  is  that  curlews  cry, 

Laughter  or  grief  above  us,  going  by, 

Laughter  that  tears  the  heart,  or  grief  that  blinds. 

O,  teach  me,  Ossian,  for  I  long  and  long 

To  serve  that  Power  and  attain  the  skill, 

To  put  my  heart's  desire  in  a  song 

And  leave  words  living  when  my  heart  is  still, 

Words,  only  words,  that  yet 

Kindle  the  startling  image  that  persists, 

The  sorrow  of  the  moorland  in  the  mists, 

The  singing  of  the  skylarks  on  the  hill.' 

Alas,  that  cry  out  of  the  passing  flame, 
That  memory  of  curlews  overhead  .  .  . 
Was  Finn's  beloved  Allan  still  the  same? 
Were  gannets  plunging  beyond  Garron  Head? 

66 


And  O  was  lovely  Saeve 
My  Mother,  whom,  for  many  a  bitter  year, 
Druids  bewitched  into  a  wandering  deer 
Hunted  by  hounds,  was  she  alive  or  dead? 

And,  instantly,  it  seemed,  beneath  me  lay 

The  Earth,  the  migrant  bird-flocks  of  the  Spring, 

The  wild-geese  of  the  world  upon  their  way 

In  cry  like  hounds  and  thundering  on  the  wing. 

And  O,  desire  smote  hard, 

To  watch  with  the  Fianna  as  they  went 

Ere  April  brings  the  colour  and  the  scent 

But  the  grass  pushes  and  the  robins  sing. 

'Niamh,'  I  cried,  'my  kindred  linger  there  . .  . 
I  must  away  among  the  birds  to  know 
Finn  once  again,  forgetting  faults  that  were ; 
And  all  those  friends  in  whom  I  gloried  so, 
The  war-worn  Holy  Band  . . . 
'O  spirits  of  the  wilderness,'  I  cried 
'Carry  me  with  you  on  your  running  tide, 
Take  me  to  Eire  with  you  as  you  go.' 

But  Niamh  was  not  there  to  answer  me ; 
The  time  had  fallen  and  the  change  begun; 
The  geese  were  flying  with  me  over  sea ; 
Dark  on  the  waves  I  saw  our  shadows  run 
As  the  great  roaring  sped. 
Above  all  winds  my  carriers  swept  the  skies, 
Thunder  and  swerve,  great  purpose,  staring  eyes, 
A  myriad  madness  utterly  at  one. 

67 


Till,  lo,  the  Hooked  Hill  and  Tivera, 

Finn's  fief,  the  mountain  dairy  and  the  ling, 

The  river  with  the  pools  where  salmon  are  . . . 

Yes,  and  the  fowlers  crouched  with  bow  and  sling, 

Watching  the  homing  birds. 

I  felt  the  geese  swerve  as  the  missiles  flew, 

I  fell  on  the  beloved  land  I  knew, 

Fell  into  age,  an  old,  bent,  broken  thing. 

Suddenly  round  me  were  the  fowlers'  hands, 

Men  with  odd  speech,  odd  clothing,  with  new  ways ; 

I  saw  new  buildings  on  Finn's  dairy  lands, 

With  cows  of  unknown  breeding  out  at  graze, 

All  gone  were  the  grey  geese. 

No  Niamh  showed :  and  I,  all  old  and  bent 

A  worn-out  coin,  too  battered  to  be  spent, 

Shaken,  in  sorrow,  sick,  and  in  a  daze. 

Then  there  were  bells,  and  then  a  great  man  stood 
Asking  if  I  were  hurt?  I  asked  for  Finn, 
Finn,  or  some  comrade  of  the  Brotherhood. 
He  said  'Wait,  Brother,  till  we  bear  you  in  . . . 
How  was  this  poor  soul  hurt?' 
They  said  'The  geese  came  over,  giving  tongue, 
He  must  have  caught  the  pebble  someone  slung  . . . 
And  here  we  found  him  lying  in  the  whin.' 

They  bore  me  to  a  bed  and  laid  me  there. 
The  great  man  tended  me  and  made  me  rest. 
Another  life  breathing  another  air 
Commanded  Eire :  this  was  manifest. 

68 


A  greater  life  than  mine  . . . 
But  I,  who  longed  for  Niamh  once  again 
Even  one  bitter  glimpse  in  winter  rain 
Would  have  been  balm  to  make  all  better  best. 

'Friend,  I  am  Patrick/  thus  the  great  man  spoke: 
'And  you?'  I  told  him:  'Ossian,  son  of  Finn, 
The  High  King's  Captain,  till  the  Kingdom  broke. 
Ask  him  to  come,  or  others  of  my  Kin . . . 
Finn,  who  commands  this  glen 
'Friend,  Finn  was  dead  and  buried  centuries  since. 
And  Ossian  disappeared,  that  famous  prince. 
Their  house  is  roof-less :  no-one  dwells  therein/ 

'Then,  Niamh,  my  Beloved,  where  is  she? 
Niamh,  with  whom  I  was  away,  away, 
In  the  sun  land,  in  the  star  land,  over  sea  . . . 
Early  today  ...  or  was  it  yesterday?  . . . 
The  green  undying  land 
'Friend,  the  tales  tell,  that  centuries  ago, 
That  Lady  came  for  Ossian  there  below; 
They  rode  into  the  clouds  at  Garron  Bay/ 

'Yes ...  so  it  was.  Where  is  she?  Is  she  here?' 
'No,'  Patrick  said,  'the  people  tell  the  tale  . . . 
With  other  tales  of  wonder  and  of  fear, 
But  this  is  Finn's  old  fief  and  dairy-vale, 
Where  his  last  Kinsmen  died, 
Two  centuries  ago,  before  our  Spring, 
Our  Easter  Primrose  blossomed  in  the  King 
And  those  old  warrior  times  began  to  fail. 

69 


But  you  are  Ossian:  we  have  often  heard 

Your  poems ;  they  are  well-remembered  still . . . 

The  apple-blossom  and  the  cuckoo  bird 

And  the  curlews  laughing  on  the  Hooked  Hill .  . 

Drink  this,  then  sleep  awhile  .  .  . 

Then,  when  refreshed,  let  all  my  lads  attend  .  .  . 

We  should  account  it  more  than  honour,  friend, 

To  hear  you  sing  your  poems,  if  you  will 

Then  I,  unhappy,  broken,  aged,  lone, 
Feeling  all  lost,  unreal,  evil,  dim, 
My  every  muscle  aching  on  the  bone, 
My  every  beauty  withered  on  the  limb, 
Seeing  this  man  so  great, 
So  beautiful  and  kind  to  one  so  lost, 
The  bitter  river  of  my  death  was  crossed. 
'I  will  most  gladly  sing,'  I  answered  him. 


PART   V 

Of  the  Death  and  Burial  of  Ossian 

I,  who  was  Patrick's  Novice,  tell  the  rest: 

While  tending  Ossian  he  bade  me  bring 

A  harp  and  catgut  from  the  music  chest, 

But  could  not  turn  the  peg  to  stretch  the  string. 

'I  am  so  weak  ...  so  weak'  .  . . 

He  said,  'I  cannot:  so  forgive  me,  friend, 

All  music  comes  to  silence  at  the  end. 

I  was  the  Bard,  when  Cormac  was  the  King.' 

70 


He  could  not  sing  that  day,  nor  the  next  day, 
But  talked  with  Patrick,  who  consoled  and  cheered. 
Then  after  sunrise,  rousing  where  he  lay, 
He  cried  'To  each,  according  to  his  weird  . . . 
Sorrow,  Love,  Glory,  Death. 

0  holy,  glorious  Patrick,  call  your  men, 

1  look  my  last  upon  my  Father's  glen. 

I  call  upon  the  Star  by  which  I  steered.' 

He  looked  towards  the  east,  where  the  tracks  cross ; 
St  Patrick  propped  him  up,  the  doors  lay  wide ; 
Then  Ossian  said:  'I  see  the  banners  toss, 
The  stallions  of  the  stars  are  in  their  pride  .  .  . 
Surely,  she  comes,  she  comes .  .  . 

0  well-beloved  beauty,  be  again 
My  taker  from  an  agony  of  pain, 

1  am  a  dying  dust,  but  you  abide. 

O  take  me  once  again  out  of  the  woe, 
Into  the  wonder  that  at  each  point  won 
Reveals  more  wonder  beautiful  to  know, 
Another  deed  more  splendid  to  be  done. 
Guide  me  once  more  away  .  .  . 

0  bright  Fianna  stepping  to  the  fife, 
Ossian  is  dusty  with  the  rags  of  life 

1  long  for  Niamh,  Princess  of  the  Sun.' 

And  lo,  as  his  voice  faltered  and  was  still, 
He,  looking  eastward,  startled,  and  exclaimed  .  . . 
'Niamh  . . .  my  Niamh,  coming  down  the  hill . . . 
And,  truly,  there,  a  shining  Knighthood  flamed, 
White-horsed,  with  banners  bright. 

71 


They  halted  where  the  ragwort  always  grows, 
And  there  a  woman  lovelier  than  a  rose 
Held  a  white  stallion  saddled  but  untamed. 

She  left  the  horses  there :  she  neared  the  doors 

And  Ossian  cried  'My  Niamh  ...  it  is  she 

And  lo,  like  pure  gold  won  from  molten  ores, 

We  saw  his  spirit  let  his  ruins  be  . . . 

His  soul,  the  green  earth's  pride, 

Rose  from  the  tattered  figure  on  the  bed, 

That  drooped  collapsed  upon  the  pillow,  dead, 

And  Niamh  spoke  'My  Ossian  . . .  come  with  me/ 

And  there  they  passed  together  into  air 
In  sparkles,  eastward :  we,  as  Patrick  bade, 
Made  ready  the  worn  husk  for  burial  there : 
Logs,  gorses,  peats  and  slivered  yews  we  laid 
Around  the  chieftain's  bed. 
Over  the  standing  stones  we  built  the  pyre, 
Then  singing  Christian  hymns  we  lit  the  fire, 
The  great  bones  burned  to  ashes  as  we  prayed. 


72 


EIGHTY-FIVE  TO  WIN 

England's  Second  Innings 

against 

The  Australian  Eleven 

at 

Kennington  Oval 

on 

Tuesday,  29  August  1882 


THE  AUSTRALIAN  ELEVEN 

A.  C.  Bannerman 

H.  H.  Massie 

W.  L.  Murdoch  [Captain) 

G.J.Bonnor 

T.  Horan 

G.  GifFen 

J.  McC.  Blackham 

T.  W.  Garrett 

H.  F.  Boyle 

S.  P.  Jones 

F.  R.  Spoffbrth 


THE    ENGLISH    ELEVEN 

R.  G.  Barlow 

Dr  W.  G.  Grace 

G.  Ulyett 

A.  P.  Lucas 

Hon.  A.  Lyttelton 

C.  T.  Studd 

J.  M.  Read 

W.  Barnes 

A.  G.  Steel 

A.  N.  Hornby  [Captain) 

E.  Peate 


Though  wayward  Time  be  changeful  as  Man's  will, 
"We  have  the  game,  we  have  the  Oval  still, 
And  still  the  Gas-Works  mark  the  Gas- Works  End 
And  still  our  sun  shines  and  the  rains  descend. 

Speak  to  me,  Muse,  and  tell  me  of  the  game 
When  Murdoch's  great  Eleven  overcame. 


73 


Laurels  were  tensely  lost  and  hardly  won 

In  that  wild  afternoon  at  Kennington, 

When  more  than  twenty  thousand  watchers  stared 

And  cheered,  and  hoped,  and  anguished,  and  despaired. 

Tell  of  the  Day,  how  heavy  rain  had  cleared 
To  sunshine  and  mad  wind  as  noon-time  neared, 
Then  showers  (sometimes  hail)  on  strong  blasts  cold, 
Making  a  wicket  good  for  men  who  bowled. 
Such  was  the  Day,  when  England's  side  went  in 
Just  before  four,  with  eighty-five  to  win. 

Grace,  and  the  Captain  (Hornby),  led  the  way, 
(Grace  to  face  Spofforth)  in  beginning  play. 
Spofforth  was  bowling  from  the  Gas- Works  End, 
Garrett  across. 

The  opposites  contend. 

What  was  this  Spofforth,  called  The  Demon  yet, 

For  men  forget,  but  cannot  all  forget? 

A  tall,  lean,  wiry  athlete  inly  lit 

With  mind,  and  saturnine  control  of  it. 

Is  it  not  said,  that  he,  with  either  hand, 

Could  fling  a  hen's  egg,  onto  grass  or  sand, 

Clear  seventy  yards,  yet  never  crack  the  shell? 

Then,  when  he  bowled,  he  seemed  a  thing  of  Hell, 
Writhing ;  grimacing ;  batsmen,  catching  breath, 
Thought  him  no  mortal  man  but  very  Death; 
For  no  man  ever  knew  what  ball  would  come 
From  that  wild  whirl,  save  one  from  devildom. 

74 


Now  the  sharp  fears  came  tugging  at  the  heart, 
As  Cunning  strove  with  Care  and  Skill  with  Art. 

Hornby  and  Grace,  with  eighty-five  to  win, 
Watched  for  some  balls,  then  made  the  runs  begin. 

Ten  had  gone  up,  when  Hornby's  wicket  went 
(His  off-stump),  from  a  ball  that  Spofforth  sent. 
One,  for  fifteen;  and  Barlow  took  his  place. 
Barlow,  our  safest  bat,  came  in  with  Grace : 
Barlow,  the  wonder,  famed  in  song  and  story, 
The  Red  Rose  County's  well-remembered  glory. 
The  first  ball  Spofforth  sent  him  bowled  him  clean. 
Two  gone,  of  England's  surest,  for  fifteen. 

But  Grace  alone  was  power  manifest, 

(Of  all  men  there,  he  is  remembered  best) 

The  great,  black-bearded  Doctor,  watchful-eyed, 

Next  to  our  Queen,  that  vanished  England's  pride; 

Grace  was  still  in;  and  Ulyett  joined  him  there. 

Slowly  the  scoring  mounted  from  the  pair. 
To  Twenty,  Thirty,  Forty,  and  anon 
Garrett  was  taken  off  and  Boyle  put  on 
And  Spofforth  changed  to  the  Pavilion  End. 

Thirty  odd  runs  and  seven  bats  to  spend, 
Surely  a  task  so  simple  could  be  done? 
Ulyett  and  Grace  seemed  settled  and  at  one. 

75 


Fifty  went  up,  and  then  a  marvel  came, 
Still  something  told  by  lovers  of  the  game. 
Spofforth  sent  down  a  ball  that  Ulyett  hit, 
No  barest  chance  (it  seemed)  to  mortal  wit. 
Snicked,  high  and  wide  it  went,  yet  with  one  hand, 
Blackham  just  caught  it  and  dissolved  the  stand. 
Three  gone,  for  fifty-one. 

Lucas  joined  Grace, 
Two  partners  famed  in  many  a  happy  case, 
But  not,  alas,  for  then,  for  two  runs  more, 
Grace  was  caught  out,  at  fifty-three  for  four, 
Caught  from  a  ball  by  Boyle,  for  Boyle  had  found 
All  he  could  wish  in  that  uncertain  ground. 

Still  thirty-two  to  win,  with  six  to  fall, 
Lyttelton  joined,  and  brought  delight  to  all, 
Enchanting  promise  came,  for  runs  were  scored, 
Lucas  and  he  put  sixty  on  the  board. 
And  then  the  conflict  quieted  to  grim. 

For  master-spirits  shine  when  hopes  are  dim ; 
Australia's  best,  all  at  their  best,  were  there. 
Light,  wicket,  and  themselves,  all  bade  beware. 
The  field  were  all  lithe  leopards  on  the  pounce : 
Each  ball  had  a  new  break  at  every  bounce. 

Twelve  deadly  overs  followed  without  score. 
Then  came  a  run,  then  deadly  maidens  more. 
Then  Spofforth  shattered  Destiny's  arrest 
And  Lyttelton' s  mid-stump  was  scattered  west. 

76 


Five  gone,  for  sixty-six,  but  Hope,  still  green, 
Felt,  the  last  five  would  make  the  last  nineteen. 
Had  we  not  Steel,  and  Studd,  and  Maurice  Read, 
Three  superb  bats?  how  could  we  fail  to  speed? 
Here,  Hornby,  saving  a  reserve  to  win, 
Re-made  the  order  of  the  going-in, 
Putting  in  Steel,  not  Studd,  at  fifth  man  gone, 
Thinking  that  Studd  might  save  us  later  on, 
If  any  later  on  might  need  a  stay. 

A  strain  and  anguish  settled  on  the  day, 
As  Steel  came  in ;  but  Lucas  cut  a  four ; 
Not  nineteen  now  but  only  fifteen  more. 

Steel  hit  his  first  ball  back  to  Spofforth's  hand. 

Then  Maurice  Read  gave  centre  and  took  stand  . . 

Read,  Surrey's  pride,  who  ever  made  hope  thrill 
In  doubtful  games  when  things  were  going  ill. 
If  Read  could  stay  .  . . 

But  Spoffortbfs  second  ball 
Made  the  mid-stump  of  Surrey's  pride  to  fall. 
Seven  men  out,  and  fifteen  still  to  get. 

But  William  Barnes  was  never  careless  yet; 

A  watchful  batsman  he,  though  skilled  to  smite, 

Barnes  joined  with  Lucas  in  the  doubtful  fight. 

Wild  was  the  cheerless  weather,  wild  the  light, 
Wild  the  contesting  souls  whom  Hope  had  fired. 

77 


All  the  Australian  team  were  men  inspired, 
Spofforth  had  said  the  matter  'could  be  done', 
And  all  the  live  eleven  were  as  one. 
The  Hope  was  theirs,  the  Hope  that  ever  wins, 
The  Hope  that  sways  the  tossed  coin  as  it  spins, 
The  starry  Hope  that  ever  makes  man  learn 
That  to  the  man  who  Hopes  the  luck  will  turn. 
The  twenty-two  at  bay  were  face  to  face. 

The  watchers'  hearts  stood  still  about  the  place. 

In  risk  so  hateful,  hoping  so  intense, 

One  English  watcher  died  there,  of  suspense. 

Barnes  hit  a  two;  three  lucky  byes  were  run; 
Ten  more  to  win,  what  joy  to  everyone. 
All  cheered  for  every  run  and  faces  shone, 
Then  Lucas  played  a  ball  of  Spofforth's  on. 
Eight,  often,  out,  and  seventy-five  the  score. 
'Over'  was  called:  the  fieldsmen  loitered  o'er. 


They  paused  in  little  groups  to  mutter  low 
The  secret  hints  the  bats  were  not  to  know. 
Then,  watching  Studd,  they  tautened,  each  in  place. 
Studd,  our  reserve,  acclaimed  a  second  Grace. 

Studd  stood  at  watch  by  Boyle,  the  Gas- Works  End ; 
On  Boyle  and  Barnes  the  minute's  issues  pend. 

78 


The  ball  had  come  to  Boyle,  who  paused  awhile, 
To  give  it  hand-hold  in  the  sawdust-pile, 
Then  walked,  intent,  and  as  he  turned  to  run, 
Saw  twenty  thousand  faces  blurred  to  one, 
And  saw,  ahead,  a  great  bat  tensely  wait 
The  ball  he  held,  the  undelivered  Fate. 

He  ran,  he  bowled,  his  length  ball  took  its  flight 

Down  the  drear  wicket  in  uncertain  light, 

It  lifted,  struck  on  Barnes's  glove,  and  leapt 

To  Murdoch,  watching  point,  who  caught,  and  kept. 

Nine  gone,  for  seventy-five,  and  last  man  in. 

Just  nine  more  runs  to  tie,  and  ten  to  win. 

Peate,  Yorkshire's  bowler,  came  in  Barnes's  place. 
The  last  man  in,  with  three  more  balls  to  face. 
Could  he  but  stand  until  Boyle's  over  ended, 
Stand,  keeping  in,  then  all  might  be  amended. 
The  other  end  would  bat,  and  Studd  was  there ; 
Studd,  Cambridge  Studd,  the  bright  bat  debonair. 
A  prayer  to  Peate  went  up  from  England's  sons : 
'Keep  steady,  Yorkshire,  Studd  will  get  the  runs. 
You,  who  throughout  the  game  have  done  so  much  . 
Now,  stand  .  .  .  keep  in  .  .  .  put  nothing  to  the  touch.' 

Peate  took  his  stand :  Boyle  bowled  his  second  ball. 

A  tumult  of  glad  shouting  broke  from  all, 
Peate  smote  it  lustily  to  leg,  for  two. 

The  ball  returned  and  Boyle  began  anew. 

79 


Seven  to  tie,  and  eight  to  win  the  game. 

Boyle  launched  another,  subtly  not  the  same ; 
And  half  the  white-faced  watchers,  staring  tense, 
Bit  their  umbrella  handles  in  suspense. 

The  third  ball  came,  but  like  a  deedless  day 
It  passed  unhit,  and  ceased  to  be  in  play. 

An  instant's  respite:  only  one  more  ball 

And  Studd  will  play,  unless  Peate's  wicket  fall. 

Boyle  took  the  ball ;  he  turned ;  he  ran ;  he  bowled, 
All  England's  watching  heart  was  stricken  cold. 

Peate's  whirling  bat  met  nothing  in  its  sweep. 
The  ball  put  all  his  wickets  in  a  heap ; 
All  out,  with  Studd  untried ;  our  star  had  set, 
All  England  out,  with  seven  runs  to  get. 

The  crowd  sat  stunned  an  instant  at  the  blow, 
Then  cheered  (and  none  had  heard  men  cheering  so), 
Cheered  the  great  cricket  that  had  won  the  game. 

In  flood  onto  the  pitch  the  watchers  came, 
SpofForth  and  Boyle  were  lifted  shoulder  high. 

Brief,  brief,  the  glow,  even  of  Victory. 
Man's  memory  is  but  a  moment  green. 
Chronicle  now  the  actors  in  the  scene, 
Unmentioned  yet,  as  Massie,  who  had  made 
Life-giving  runs,  with  Bannerman  to  aid; 

80 


Jones,  Giffen,  Bonnor,  Horan,  all  who  shared 
Those  deadly  hours  when  disaster  stared. 

Quickly  the  crowd  dispersed  to  life's  routine 
Of  Life  and  Death  and  wonder  what  they  mean. 
A  thunder  muttered  and  a  shower  fell 
As  twilight  came  with  star  and  Vesper-bell. 
Over  the  Oval,  stamped  where  Spofforth  bowled, 
Reviving  grass-blades  lifted  from  the  mould. 


81 


ODYSSEUS  TELLS 


Tell  of  the  Wooden  Horse  that  ruined  Troy? 

I'll  tell  you  of  the  Horse,  but  Destiny, 

The  Fate  that  none  escapes  from,  ruined  Troy. 

What  was  Troy  like?  A  fortress  on  a  hill, 
Windy,  wide-wayed,  well-walled  and  wonderful. 
With  two  great  temples  and  King  Priam's  palace, 
Above  a  grass  plain  marvellous  for  horses. 
There  are  no  such  horses  now,  nor  such  a  City. 

What  brought  the  Greeks  to  Troy?  Not  what  men  say. 

King  Agamemnon's  greed,  envy  and  hate 

Of  ought  more  wealthy  and  splendid  than  himself. 

He  forced  us  there,  that  godless  King  of  ours, 
Hoping  for  easy  conquest  and  great  plunder. 

What  with  that  idiot  King  and  pestilence, 

We  were  beaten  before  Troy,  and  three  parts  starved ; 

In  mutiny,  on  brink  of  anarchy, 

And  winter  coming :  friends,  in  two  weeks  more 

Any  Greek  man  would  have  killed  any  King 

Who  tried  to  keep  him  there  besieging  Troy. 

82 


The  King  knew  clearly  what  I  thought  of  him, 
But  someone  had  to  tell  him  how  things  stood. 
And  so  I  spoke  .  .  . 

If  I  had  held  my  peace 
The  Greeks  would  have  cut  Agamemnon's  throat, 
And  sailed  for  home  and  Troy  would  still  be  Troy. 

But,  no,  I  spoke,  and  as  I  spoke,  a  Captain 
Brought  news  that  young  Prince  Ilus,  Priam's  son, 
His  youngest  son,  consecrate  to  Apollo, 
Had  just  been  captured  by  our  foragers, 
And  Agamemnon  said  'Let  the  young  dog 
Be  branded,  and  then  sold  to  slavery.' 

Then  I  was  fool  enough  to  speak  again. 
'O  Majesty,'  I  said,  'This  is  a  chance 
Of  making  peace  with  honour  to  both  sides. 
A  chance  that  the  gods  send  to  end  the  war. 
The  Prince  must  be  returned:  he  is  Apollo's. 
We  should  insult  Apollo,  shaming  him, 
And  outrage  to  Apollo  brings  swift  death. 
Send  him,  with  all  our  captives,  back  to  Troy. 
You  could  demand  Queen  Helen  in  exchange, 
But  add  some  gifts :  King  Priam  loves  his  son. 
He  will  accept  such  terms,  or  any  terms.' 

What,  do  you  think,  the  sulky  dog  replied? 
'Not  thus  do  Argive  Kings  commanding  armies 
Treat  with  insulting  foes.  Dismiss,  the  Council.' 

This,  to  pure  sense,  when,  without  sudden  peace, 
The  army  meant  to  kill  him  and  go  home. 

83 


Well,  after  we  had  gone,  the  ruffian  saw 

At  least,  the  risk  of  outraging  Apollo. 

He  had  had  enough  of  that,  not  long  before  . .  . 

A  herald  went  to  Troy  that  afternoon. 

Then,  there  came  truce,  'for  burying  the  dead'. 
Then,  there  came  friendliness,  while  young  Prince  Ilus 
Went  home  to  Troy  with  gifts,  paying  no  ransom, 
With  all  our  other  Trojan  prisoners, 
(All  not  yet  sold  as  slaves)  all  ransomless. 

Then  there  came  generosity  from  Priam, 
A  great  heart  greatly  touched  by  generous  deeds ; 
Not  only  wine,  oil,  meat  and  barley  meal, 
But  all  the  Greeks  made  prisoners  of  war, 
All,  since  the  trouble  started,  without  ransom. 

Some  of  those  men  had  been  in  Troy  for  years, 
Some,  from  before  the  war,  merchants  from  Argos, 
Subjects  of  Menelaus  and  our  King, 
By  no  means  glad  to  be  restored  to  them. 

There  were  three  of  these  ...  I  saw  them  coming  in 
From  Troy,  each  laden  with  especial  gifts. 
I  saw  how  terrified  they  were  to  come. 
They  flung  themselves  at  Agamemnon's  feet 
Laying  their  gifts  before  him,  gold,  gems,  spice. 
The  King  looked  on  them  with  contempt,  and  said, 
'Take  these  for  further  question  to  my  quarters.' 

84 


Then,  as  the  three  were  taken  by  the  guards, 
He  kicked  their  gifts  to  Menelaus,  saying, 
'Dowry  for  your  recovered  Helen,  brother.' 
And  followed,  snarling,  underneath  his  breath. 

Within  the  hour,  he  was  back  again; 

And  secret  as  he  was,  some  inner  joy 

Was  moving  his  black  spirit  wickedly. 

He  said  'I  must  send  instantly  to  Priam. 

Call  in  the  Herald  .  . .  Brother,  our  Star  rises.' 

What  the  dog  meant  I  had  not  the  least  guess, 

Except  that  something  evil  gladdened  him. 

But  the  Herald  went  to  Troy  with  olive  sprays, 

Asking  for  armistice  'for  propitiation 

For  desecration  of  Apollo's  pastures.' 

(The  green  plain  outside  Troy ;  our  battlefield.) 

Within  an  hour  Apollo's  Priest  from  Troy 

Came,  saying  this,  'Apollo's  Oracle, 

Speaking  the  God's  will  through  His  Prophetess, 

Bids  Greece  and  Troy  cease  war  till  the  new  moon. 

At  new  moon,  let  them  meet  outside  Troy  gate, 

Pour  a  libation  of  new  wine  and  swear 

A  lasting  peace,  made  binding  with  rich  gifts.' 

Well .  .  .  that  was  Peace,  at  least  until  new  moon. 
Most  certain  peace,  forever,  as  I  thought. 

I  did  not  see  the  King,  but  heard  report 

That  secretly  amid  the  Argos  ships 

He  was  preparing  a  great  sacred  peace  gift. 

85 


The  time  went  by :  the  day  of  New  Moon  came. 

Suddenly  Agamemnon  sent  for  me 

(By  armed  guard).  There  they  sat,  he  and  his  brother, 

Inside  that  secret  hut,  beside  a  vast 

Fierce  wooden  stallion  skinned  with  beaten  gold. 

'Come  here,'  the  King  said,  'and  swear  secrecy.' 

I  swore,  expecting  evil ;  then  he  said : 

'This  Horse  you  look  at  is  our  gift  to  Troy. 
It  will  be  dragged  to  Troy  this  afternoon, 
While  we  swear  peace  with  Priam  as  arranged. 
It  will  be  left  there  while  we  burn  our  camp, 
And  sail  for  home  according  to  the  order. 

When  our  camp  burns  and  the  Greek  ships  have  sailed, 

The  Trojans  are  to  drag  this  votive  Horse 

Up  to  Apollo's  temple  in  the  city. 

As  offering  to  Apollo  when  day  dawns. 

Listen  .  .  .  within  the  Horse  will  be  five  men. 
You,  who  know  Troy  so  well,  command  the  party. 
My  Brother  will  be  second,  under  you. 
The  third,  Epeios  here,  who  made  the  Horse, 
The  others  here,  in  blood-feud  against  Troy. 

You  five  will  go  within  the  Horse  at  once ; 
You  will  have  air  enough :  you  will  keep  silence 
Whatever  happens:  if  you  but  keep  silence 
No  man  can  possibly  suspect  the  guile. 

86 


When  the  cocks  crow  in  Troy  tomorrow  morning 
Then  you,  as  Captain  will  undo  the  bolts, 
Creep  out,  with  all  the  Four,  to  the  South  Gate, 
Strangle  the  sentry  and  unbar  the  gate. 

Three  hundred  picked  men  of  the  army  here, 
Will  not  have  sailed  for  home,  but  come  ashore, 
Marched  in  the  night  to  Troy,  and  will  be  there, 
To  enter  and  take  Troy  as  the  gate  opens. 

We  do  not  ask  your  comment,  but  put  trust 
In  your  wise  judgment.  When  our  plan  succeeds 
Be  sure,  the  Throne  of  Argos  will  be  grateful. 

Now  practise  in  the  Horse :  within  the  hour 
You  Five  will  be  within  it,  bound  for  Troy, 
Troy  will  be  ours  before  morning  dawns/ 

We  practised  in  the  Horse :  entering,  leaving, 
Trying  the  bolts,  amazed  at  the  thing's  craft. 
That  wooden  stallion  was  a  masterpiece. 
We  sharpened  up  our  knives:  we  ate  and  drank, 
And  took  a  bowl  of  grapes  for  sustenance. 
Then,  it  was  time ;  and  as  I  entered  last, 
And  saw  the  gleam  on  Agamemnon's  face, 
My  many  first  misgivings  became  blacker. 
And  as  I  drew  the  bolts  that  shut  us  in 
I  thought  of  what  a  madman  once  had  said: 
'He  who  wants  anything  unspeakably, 
Must  sacrifice  his  nearest,  dearest,  wisest, 
Staunchest,  nay,  very  manhood,  for  success, 
Then  will  succeed,  and  then,  repent  the  cost.' 

87 


Were  we  five  Agamemnon's  sacrifice? 

But  we  were  under  way,  dragged  by  six  horse-teams, 

There,  in  that  sweltering  Horse,  I  could  reflect, 
On  Agamemnon's  blackest  treachery, 
This  devilry  of  his  to  god  and  man. 

There,  outside  Troy,  we  heard  him  swear  to  Priam 
A  lasting  peace  by  earth,  air,  sun  and  moon. 

I  shuddered  lest  the  gods  should  smite  us  dead. 

The  ritual  ceased  .  .  .  then  Agamemnon  cried 
'Priam,  our  Brother,  the  Greeks  sail  for  home, 
Leaving  this  Horse  of  peace  as  pledge  of  peace.' 

Priam  replied,  'May  the  gods  bless  our  peace.' 
The  parties  moved  away,  leaving  us  there. 


The  sun  had  set :  our  stifling  den  was  cooler, 
Outside,  some  Trojan  allies  marched  from  Troy. 
Quite  close,  above  us,  people  on  Troy  walls 
Talked  as  they  watched  for  something,  then  a  rider 
Came  galloping  to  Troy  from  the  sea  beach. 
'They've  put  to  sea,  King  Priam,'  the  rider  cried, 
'They've  fired  their  camp;  it  is  blazing  end  to  end.' 

I  had  guessed  as  much  from  cheering  on  the  walls. 
These  were  the  signs  of  peace  they  had  awaited. 

88 


Now  came  the  test :  could  Priam  be  so  mad, 
Could  any  living  mortal  be  so  mad, 
As  to  believe  King  Agamemnon's  oath? 
Could  great  Apollo's  priests  and  prophetess 
Drag  such  a  Plot  of  Death  to  the  God's  House 
(Or  into  Troy)  unwarned  by  the  God's  self? 
If  King  or  Priest  were  blind,  surely  some  Trojan 
Would  cause  our  Horse  to  stay  outside  the  walls? 

Friends,  King  and  Priest  and  Trojan  were  at  one 

In  saying  that  this  Argive  offering, 

This  consecration  of  enduring  peace, 

Should  enter  Troy  dragged  by  the  votaries 

Of  that  great  grey-eyed  Queen  to  Whose  live  Wisdom 

I  was  from  youth  sworn  servant  consecrate. 

I  heard  Her  servants,  from  Her  sacred  House, 
Her  Trojan  House,  the  holiest  place  on  Earth, 
Singing  Her  Hymn,  come  to  us  from  the  Gate 
To  bring  us  into  Troy,  to  ruin  Troy. 

I  bit  my  knuckles  in  my  agony. 

This  was  why  Agamemnon  made  me  Captain 

That  all  the  infamy  of  sacrilege 

Should  rest  on  me,  that  so  I  might  be  burned. 

The  singers  manned  the  ropes  and  dragged  us  in, 
Still  singing,  into  Troy,  up  the  paved  way, 
Through  a  great  crowd  into  the  central  square, 
Outside  Apollo's  Temple,  where  they  stopped. 

89 


We  were  in  Troy:  and  now,  friends,  Life  or  Death? 

Life,  seemingly :  the  High  Priest  told  the  crowd 
That  this  great  Gift  was  fashioned  for  Apollo ; 
That  it  should  rest  in  quiet  till  tomorrow, 
Then  dragged  away  and  burned  at  the  God's  spring. 
'It  is  the  God's  Horse,  bringing  peace;  keep  peace; 
And  thank  the  undying  Gods  for  giving  peace.' 

Well .  .  .  the  crowd  shuffled  round  and  stared  and  went, 

There  was  a  guard  about  us  all  the  time 

Telling  folk  not  to  touch  God's  holy  Horse. 

But  presently,  when  there  were  fewer  guards, 

A  noisier  rabble  gathered,  calling  'Fire. 

Bring  fire,  we  will  burn  the  image  here  .  .  . 

'Yes,  burn  it  now.'  They  cursed:  they  struck  the  Horse. 

I  thought  'This  is  the  end:  we  must  escape.' 

And  just  as  I  laid  hand  upon  the  bolts 

Ready  to  let  us  out ...  a  something  came 

That  checked  the  rage  and  made  our  blood  run  cold. 

It  was  a  laughter  forced  from  too  much  grief. 
It  was  King  Priam's  daughter,  mad  Kassandra. 

She  cried,  'I  am  Kassandra,  Apollo's  priestess. 
He  is  all  Light,  all  Fire,  and  I  am  His, 
Or  shall  be  soon. 

In  the  green  Idan  field 
Among  the  daffodils,  he  courted  me. 
We  could  have  gone  into  the  living  Spring 
He  was  the  Living  Spring  -  but,  no,  I  could  not. 

90 


Again,  in  bluebell  time,  with  apple-blossom, 
Like  living  Summer,  Apollo  begged  my  love  . . . 
We  could  have  entered  Summer  side  by  side, 
Undying  Summer,  whose  swallows  never  fly. 
I  would  not  though ;  a  girl  is  a  shy  thing. 

But  I  was  wrong  to  refuse,  for  my  love  burns, 

I,  being  now  Apollo,  I  burn,  I  burn, 

With  the  inmost  truth  that  nobody  believes. 

Apollo  will  woo  again  before  the  snow  falls. 

What  is  this  false  Horse  that  you  call  Apollo's? 

Apollo  has  his  horses  in  the  wild  .  .  . 
Stallions  on  Ida :  dolphins  in  the  sea  .  .  . 
This  is  no  Horse. 

Listen  .  .  .  Are  you  a  Horse? 
He  says  'I  am  a  little  house  of  death.' 

Who  made  you,  then,  to  be  a  house  of  death? 
He  says  'King  Menelaus  paid  for  me, 
The  master  craftsmen  made  me,  and  their  thought 
Is  blood  and  running  death  and  running  fire 
That  will  never  cease,  for  Troy  will  burn  forever, 
Over  her  murdered  dead. 

These  towers  will  glow 
Forever  red  under  the  blackest  cloud 
Of  any  funeral  pyre.' 

The  Horse  says  this' 

9i 


Then,  in  the  utter  silence,  Priam's  voice. 
'Come,  little  Daughter;  it  is  late  and  dark, 
The  god  Apollo  bids  all  mortals  sleep. 
Even  his  servants  have  to  sleep  .  .  .  and  you  . . . 
Come,  now,  away  to  rest;  this  way,  with  me.' 

Steps  died  away  . . .  the  muttering  crowd  dispersed, 
But  guard  was  set;  a  dozen  guards  at  least, 
They  stayed:  and  we,  within  the  Horse,  we,  too, 
Stayed,  cramped,  half-frozen  now,  and  stupefied. 

I,  who  commanded,  had  to  face  the  fact . .  . 
The  time  was  not  yet  midnight :  cocks  would  crow 
A  long  sea-watch  ahead;  and  these  new  guards 
Would  stay  till  dawn,  or  till  a  guard  relieved. 

Well .  . .  could  we  five  endure  five  hours  more? 

I  doubted  it :  we  were  in  torment  there. 

But  if  I  opened-up,  surprised  the  sentries, 

In  sudden  dark  attack,  we  might  escape. 

If  not,  when  we  attempted  this  at  dawn 

We  should  be  all  too  stiff  with  cramp  to  struggle. 

I  muttered  to  myself 'The  worst  of  evil 
Is,  always,  just  the  fear  of  it.  Endure.' 

After  a  weary  while  the  guard  was  changed 
The  new  guard  ate  and  drank  and  settled  down. 

92 


And  hours  passed,  for  hours  always  pass. 

The  burning  summers  pass  and  the  rains  come, 

The  killing  winters  pass  and  the  leaves  come. 

I  thought  'Tonight  will  pass  and  cocks  will  crow.' 

Our  guardsmen  seemed  to  sleep :  Troy  seemed  to  sleep, 

Even  we  slept  at  last;  a  sort  of  sleep. 

Then  suddenly  with  scream  after  shrill  scream, 
Cries,  movement,  rushing  feet,  Kassandra  came, 
She  had  some  pan  of  fire,  for  I  saw  light. 
'Fire,  fire,'  she  cried,  'Apollo  bids  me  fire, 
This  sepulchre  of  hell,  this  pod  of  death 
Before  its  seeds  spread  fire  and  death  in  Troy.' 

She  struck  the  Horse  with  a  great  pan  of  fire 
Again,  again,  again,  screaming  out  'Fire'. 

All  the  guards  roused,  and  women  came  with  lights, 
And  all  there  tried  to  seize  this  god-possessed 
Wild  prophetess  in  frenzy,  but  she  flung  free. 

Priam  and  Hecuba  came  hurrying-in. 

Mind  you,  the  coals  had  set  the  Horse  on  fire, 

The  mane  had  burnt;  the  fire  had  been  scattered 

And  things  were  singeing:  the  Horse  was  full  of  smoke, 

There  was  a  crowd  about  us ;  Kassandra  fighting, 

People  beating  or  treading  out  the  fire, 

And  Kassandra,  quelled,  flung  sobbing  upon  the  floor, 

Priam  and  Hecuba  were  tender  to  her, 

They  helped  her  to  a  seat  where  she  sat  moaning, 

Men  bringing  water  splashed  it  on  the  Horse. 

93 


Suddenly,  Kassandra  clasped  the  Horse  and  spoke. 

'Menelaus,  and  Epeios  and  Odysseus .  .  . 

And  two  men,  red  with  blood,  thirsting  for  blood. 

We  burnt  your  city,  long  ages  ago, 

You  have  forgotten  where;  I  have  forgotten; 

But  the  all-living  justice  never  forgets. 

You  come  to  burn  our  city,  fire  for  fire  .  .  . 

Another  long  long  agony,  repenting. 

0  friends,  go  to  your  rest,  but  before  sleep, 
Pray  to  Apollo,  to  be  merciful 

To  this  His  city,  whose  stallion  saved  his  Mother. 
You  Greeks,  whose  sea-horse  saved  His  Mother,  pray, 
Pray,  too,  before  the  fires  within  you  win. 

1  will  go  pray,  for  quiet  comes  to  me  .  .  . 
After  the  mad  seas  of  the  storm,  the  swell, 
The  slow,  dim  heave,  exhaustion,  seeking  rest.' 

Deep  silence  fell,  then  Priam  ordered  'Go', 

To  all  folk  there:  then,  gently,  'Come,  Kassandra.' 

The  lights  moved  with  the  footsteps,  east  and  west. 
The  lights  and  footsteps  died :  we  were  alone. 
Alone  in  Troy,  past  midnight,  in  silent  Troy. 

Then,  instantly,  I  whispered,  'Out;  now;  out.' 
I  drew  the  bolt . . .  somehow,  we  all  crawled  out. 
Choked  with  the  smoke,  spent,  aching,  agonised. 
They  were  for  lying  prone:  I,  who  knew  Troy, 
Cursed  them  for  mutineers.  'Come,  hide,'  I  hissed. 

94 


King  Menelaus  called  me:  'Insolent  dog.' 
'Dog,  sir,  yourself,'  I  said,  'I  command  here. 
Get,  all  of  you,  within  that  temple  door. 
In,  now;  in,  all  of  you:  in,  all  of  you.' 

So,  what  with  oaths  and  blows  I  drove  them  in, 
Into  the  secret  space  behind  the  altar. 
There  we  could  stretch,  O  joy  untenable. 

The  peril  was  as  nothing  to  the  ease  .  .  . 

We  five  had  been  through  death  into  release  .  .  . 

We  stretched  .  .  .  we  fell  asleep  .  .  .  even  I  slept. 

1  slept  not  long:  I  shook  them:  'Listen,'  I  said. 

'I  used  to  know  Troy  well  before  the  war. 

I  came  to  spy  here  early  in  the  war, 

And  found  odd  changes  in  the  gates  and  roads. 

They  must  have  made  many  more  changes  since. 

I  must  make  certain  what  the  changes  are, 

Before  we  venture  more:  our  lives  depend  on't. 

I  am  going  out :  I  charge  and  order  you 
To  stay  here,  still  as  death,  till  I  return. 
I  may  be  gone  an  hour,  but  not  more. 

If  I  am  seen  and  set  upon,  I'll  shout, 

If  I  shout  Help,  hurry  to  rescue  me. 

If  I  shout  Greeks,  know  that  you  must  escape. 

Unhook  the  Horse's  traces  instantly, 

And  let  yourselves  over  the  city  wall. 

95 


The  parapet  is  not  ten  yards  away  .  . . 
There,  past  the  altar. 

When  you  reach  the  ground 
Look  for  our  comrades  coming  to  attack. 
Two  of  you  keep  awake  and  still  as  death. 
And  all  of  you  wait  here. 
If  you  are  found  and  questioned,  answer  this, 
That  you  are  Idan  allies  of  King  Priam 
Who  missed  the  signal  when  your  comrades  marched. 
But  you  will  not  be  found,  if  you  keep  still, 
So  wait  for  me.  This  is  the  safest  place 
In  all  Troy  city.  Do  not  stir  from  here.' 

All  four  declared  that  they  would  do  as  bidden, 

So  out  I  glid  into  the  temple  yard, 

In  Troy,  by  the  great  stars,  two  hours  to  cock-crow. 

My  first  excursion  was  to  see  the  gate 
That  Agamemnon  ordered  us  to  open. 
As  I  expected,  it  had  been  walled-up. 
The  very  road  to  it  impassable. 
We  could  not  open,  nor  our  comrades  enter. 
So  much  for  Agamemnon's  Kingly  plan. 

I  tried  the  postern  gate ;  that,  too,  was  walled. 

No  man  had  used  it  since  the  war  began, 

As  I  had  feared :  the  only  gate  in  use 

Was  the  King's  gate  by  which  the  Horse  had  entered. 

Now  that  gate  was  beneath  King  Priam's  palace, 
Where  lights  still  burned  and  guards  would  surely  be, 
How  many  guards?  How  many  more,  near  by? 

96 


I  had  to  try  to  find,  finding  my  way. 
Troy  was  all  changed  from  all  that  I  remembered, 
Allies  had  lived  in  Troy,  stores  had  been  hived, 
Roads  blocked  with  huts  for  barracks  and  for  barns, 
And  I,  in  moonless  midnight,  thief  and  spy, 
Had  to  discover  passage  through  the  maze. 

It  took  a  time :  much  longer  than  I  thought, 
But  luckily  the  city-dogs  were  gone, 
(King  Priam's  boar-hounds),  luckily  for  me. 

And  then,  at  last,  I  saw  the  gate-house  guard. 
Two  men,  under  a  lamp,  playing  at  draughts. 
Others  (perhaps  a  dozen)  stretched  asleep, 
And  nets  across  the  door  against  surprise. 

I  could  not  see  how  we  could  clear  the  nets, 

And  overcome  the  dozen  by  surprise. 

Again  I  cursed  the  folly  of  the  King 

Planning  such  schemes,  then  giving  me  command 

To  do  them,  possible  to  do  or  not. 

I  crept  away  into  a  dark  recess 

And  puzzled  how  we  might  surprise  the  guard. 

They  were  too  many  .  .  .  yet,  perhaps,  Epeios 

Might  scream  some  distance  off.  . .  the  guards  might  run 

To  quell  the  tumult,  while  we  other  four 

Attacked  those  left  and  opened  the  great  gate. 

We  should  be  one  to  three :  and  then  the  gate  . . . 
Barred,  I  could  see ;  probably  chained  and  locked. 

97 


Even  if  we  killed  the  guard,  one  against  three, 
How  open  up  before  half  Troy  was  roused? 

I  saw  no  way  of  doing  the  King's  will. 
'Possibly  one  among  us  may  suggest 
Some  mad  device  that  may  be  destiny's,' 
I  muttered  as  I  turned  to  tell  my  fellows. 

But  as  I  groped  the  dark,  a  thought  occurred. 
'King  Agamemnon  seldom  tells  the  truth, 
Never  the  whole  truth;  is  he  fooling  us? 

No  ...  he  has  something  planned :  some  treachery, 
Breaking  of  oath,  bringing  the  hope  of  plunder. 
We  are  a  portion  of  the  plan;  but  what? 
Something  is  on  its  way  to  ruin  Troy. 

Are  we  to  cause  diversion,  when  it  comes? 
But  can  it  come?  or,  coming,  can  it  enter? 
How  can  it  enter,  save  by  the  King's  Gate? 
Here  is  some  devilry  of  Agamemnon's .  .  . 
And  Menelaus  must  know  what  it  is .  .  . 

Or  are  the  five  of  us  sent  to  be  killed? 
That  Agamemnon  may  be  rid  of  us, 
And  have  our  fiefs  and  ships? 

Still,  if  the  Greeks  were  coming  to  attack 
They  must  be  seen,  or  heard. 

Over  the  rampart 
I  stared  into  the  night  across  the  plain. 

98 


I  heard  the  hurry  of  wind  and  whimper  of  water. 

I  saw  a  blackness,  and,  far-off,  a  gleam 

Where  embers  of  the  burnt  Greek  camp  flared  up. 

There  was  no  sight  nor  sound  of  armed  men  coming 
Near  Troy,  as  Agamemnon  said  they  would. 

Had  they  set  forth,  perhaps,  and  lost  their  way? 
Men  almost  must  when  Agamemnons  lead, 
Or  had  they  mutinied  and  sailed  for  home? 

I  had  stayed  too  long :  I  turned  to  tell  the  four. 

And,  turning,  1  saw  nickering  light  ahead ; 
Light,  near  the  Horse  .  .  . 

An  ember  from  the  pan 
Smashed  by  Kassandra  had  set  fire  to  something. 

That  would  rouse  Troy  .  .  .  too  true  ...  a  hut  was  burning; 
Some  bit  of  lower  board  .  .  .  but  what  was  worse. 
Inside  the  temple  of  the  four  a  voice  . .  . 
The  four  were  talking :  yes,  and  had  a  light. 
Talking,  with  light,  in  Troy  .  .  .  had  they  gone  mad? 

Were  they  the  Four,  or  the  killers  of  the  Four? 
The  light,  and  voice,  were  both  where  the  Four  lay. 

Was  it  a  temple-priest,  intoning  prayer? 

At  least,  there  was  no  alarm,  no  cry,  no  fight. 

99 


Through  the  empty  temple,  I  crept  terrified. 

I  peered  into  the  shrine;  my  heart  stopped  beating. 

A  shrouded  woman's  corpse  holding  a  lamp; 
A  white  ecstatic  face  was  muttering  bliss. 

It  was  Kassandra  talking  to  the  God. 

The  Four  had  gone.  I  heard  Kassandra  say, 
'Is  it  Thy  doom,  that  Greek  dogs  kill  the  stag? 
The  hounds  that  murder  stags  are  only  dogs. 
Doing  allotted  doom,  they  are  but  dogs ; 
What  follows  dogs  that  do  allotted  doom.' 

A  spirit  voice  said  'Doom,  on  tireless  feet.' 

The  very  God  said  that ;  no  human  throat. 

A  voice  that  clave  like  fire  to  the  soul. 

The  light  went  out,  the  face  was  no  more  there. 

I  tottered  out,  for  doom  on  tireless  feet 

Was  all  too  near  .  .  .  had  it  destroyed  the  Four? 

Where  were  the  four?  Not  murdered  in  the  temple; 

Not  in  the  Horse  again,  as  I  could  see 

By  the  flame  near  it ;  neither  had  they  taken 

The  traces  to  escape  over  the  rampart .  . . 

But  they  were  gone,  despite  all  oath  and  order. 

And  now  a  cock  crowed  for  an  hour  from  dawn. 
At  any  moment  now,  I  might  be  seen. 
I  moved  to  a  dark  den  out  of  the  fire-light. 

ioo 


The  four  must  still  be  near,  expecting  me. 

As  for  King  Agamemnon's  sacking  force, 
It  had  not  come,  nor,  if  it  came,  could  enter. 

But  where  had  the  four  vanished  .  .  .  yes .  . .  and  why? 

Troy  was  all  dead  asleep  about  me  still; 
Dark,  often,  for  the  fire  on  the  hut 
Lapsed  down,  and  almost  out,  as  the  wind  fell 
Between  the  midnight  gusts. 

I  watched  and  listened. 

And  then  a  strange  noise  from  beneath  my  feet, 
Down  in  the  earth,  in  cellar  or  in  crypt, 
Of  something  moving  there,  came  to  my  ears, 
But  what  could  move,  and  make  a  noise  like  that? 
A  long  thing,  slowly  moving  stealthily  . . .  ? 

Friends,  Troy  was  holy  then  for  a  great  shrine, 
My  Goddess'  temple,  near  to  where  I  hid. 

I  knew,  too  well,  what  horror  glided  there. 

Long  centuries  since,  the  earliest  City  Troy 
Stood  northward,  on  the  sacred  Tamarisk  Hill. 
The  King  moved  city  and  temples  to  the  Hill 
Where  now  I  stood,  but  was  afraid  to  move 
The  image  of  the  Goddess  whom  I  serve. 

The  Goddess  by  an  earthquake  clove  a  way 
Under  the  ground  and  walked  that  rocky  crypt 
To  Her  new  home,  and  there  dwelt  close  to  me. 

101 


And  (as  the  story  said)  terrible  snakes 
Dripping  cold  poison,  kept  that  secrecy 
Death  to  all  shrine-breakers  and  foes  of  Troy. 

That  noise  beneath  me  was  the  eternal  snakes 
Crawling  upon  their  scaly  milkless  breasts. 

There  in  the  narrow  passage  of  the  rock, 

Beneath  my  feet,  after  a  thousand  years, 

Those  sightless,  bloodless  deaths  crawled  in  the  dark. 

Crawled,  now,  for  me,  sworn  servant  of  the  goddess, 

My  Goddess,  who  had  kept  and  counselled  me  .  . . 

I,  now,  her  shrine-breaker  and  foe  to  Troy. 

She  who  had  ever  helped  .  .  .  believe  me,  friends, 
I  needed  help,  then;  I  was  terrified. 
I  turned  towards  Her  door  .  .  . 

A  pale  streak  came  on  the  black  mountain-tops. 

Suddenly,  women  screamed  inside  Her  temple, 
The  cocks  of  Troy  crowed  with  a  shattering  cry, 
The  temple  doors  flung  open,  the  bronze  bolts  snapped, 
The  multitudinous  bright-eyed  little  owls 
Tu-whood  about  the  glittering  Goddess'  Self .  .  . 
Two  votaresses  drew  white  fire  about  Her, 
She  spoke  hot  words  of  fire  into  my  heart: 
'Hence,  hence,  my  servitor,  as  smoke  on  wind. 
Death  desecrates  My  House  and  I  leave  Troy.' 

102 


Leaning  into  the  wind  She  sped  away 

The  owls  with  fiery  eyes  in  clouds  about  Her. 

The  olive  trees  beside  the  temple  door 

Shrivelled  in  sudden  fire  and  fell  in  embers, 

Lighting  the  bodies  of  Her  votaresses 

Dead  of  their  wounds  in  casting  open  the  doors. 

In  the  dark  temple  Menelaus  was  shouting 
Silence,  to  cursing  soldiers  stumbling  there. 

Then  instantly  I  knew  the  terrible  truth. 

One  of  our  Argive  prisoners  from  Troy 

Must  by  some  Destiny  have  learned  the  entrance, 

The  earth-quake-riven  entrance  to  the  Shrine. 

He,  profane  dog,  had  told  the  all-daring  King 

Wide-ruling,  wider-greedy  Agamemnon, 

And  he  had  dared  this  crime  .  . . 

Doubtless  the  snakes  were  endless  centuries  dead 

And  now  doom  came,  the  doom  that  never  dies, 

And  doom  for  me  ...  in  twenty  heart-beats  more. 

Suddenly  Menelaus  came  with  Ajax 
(Bull-head,  we  called  him)  to  the  temple-door 
Within  a  knife-thrust  of  me  as  I  crouched. 

He  said,  'You'll  find  him  in  Apollo's  temple, 
Beyond  that  burning  hut .  . . 
You  know  my  Brother's  orders,  what  to  do?' 
'I  know,'  the  Bull-Head  answered,  'Have  no  fear, 
Then,  shall  we  now  set  on?  Will  you  command?' 

103 


He  had  a  famous  yell,  King  Menelaus, 

His  one  unusual  gift :  he  uttered  it. 

And  all  the  Greeks  swarmed  from  the  Mystery, 

Yelling  Troy's  sudden  end  in  fire  and  blood. 

In  fire,  first,  for  even  as  they  rushed 

A  great  gust  swept  us  with  a  roar  of  fire. 

That  burning  hut  was  one  of  countless  such, 
Dry  wooden  stores  or  barracks  all  now  blazing 
With  great  bright  flags  and  streamers  of  quick  flame, 
Towering  round  and  licking  up  the  Horse 
And  streaming  over  Troy,  heaped  by  the  wind 
Fed  by  a  thousand  jars  of  olive  oil. 

The  fire  and  surprise  broke  Priam's  City. 

The  flames  were  blown  down  like  a  cataract 
With  foam  of  flaming  rags,  tatters  and  sparks 
In  the  black  smoke,  like  pestilence  on  wings, 
And,  high  above,  in  the  pearl  of  morning  sky, 
The  multitudes  of  mountain  birds  were  flying 
South  towards  Egypt,  crying  I  know  not  what, 
Crying  like  curlews  being  the  living  souls 
Of  all  old  Troy,  lamenting  the  town  dead, 
Doom  having  come  there  upon  tireless  feet. 


104 


EPILOGUE 


'What  did  I  do?'  you  ask  me. 

'You  remember. 
The  Goddess  cried  'Hence,  hence,  as  smoke  on  wind.' 
The  smoke  blinding  the  plain  reminded  me. 

You  ask,  'Had  they  great  plunder?'  No,  my  friends. 
The  city  was  a  red-hot  glowing  wreck 
Undiggable,  and  unendurable. 
The  gold  still  lies  among  the  dead  men's  bones 
And  the  women  and  the  little  children  murdered. 
The  army  forced  the  King  to  sail  for  home. 

Strange  .  .  .  but  for  mad  Kassandra's  pan  of  fire 
Smashed  on  the  Horse,  Troy  might  not  have  been  burnt. 
And  Agamemnon  might  have  had  the  gold 
Instead  .  .  .  of  what  he  had.  But .  . .  of  myself  ? 

My  friends,  the  grey-eyed  Goddess  is  my  Fortune. 
For  Agamemnon  and  the  other  Kings 
Their  Destinies  were  as  Apollo  said. 
Doom  followed  on  them  all  on  tireless  feet. 


105 


KING  EDWARD  THE  SECOND 
TELLS  HIS   STORY 

(Supposing  the  letter  from  Manuel  Fieschi  to  King  Edward  the  Third, 
to  be  true.) 

The  letter  may  he  read  in  Bishop  Stubbs's  'Historical  Introductions 
to  the  Rolls  Series',  as  reprinted  from  the  Publications  de  la  Societe 
Archeologique  de  Montpellier,  December  1877. 

The  usual  story  is  that  this  King  was  savagely  murdered  in  Berkeley 
Castle,  and  later  buried  in  Gloucester  Cathedral.  Fieschi  writes  that  he 
escaped  from  Berkeley  just  in  time,  stayed  in  hiding,  at  Corf e,  for  some 
months,  then  (on  some  alarm)  crossed  France  into  Italy,  where  he  lived 
as  a  religious  recluse  till  his  death. 

If  this  be  true,  the  body  in  the  tomb  at  Gloucester  may  be  that  of  his 
gaoler. 

I 
So,  my  Son  seeks  to  know  how  I  escaped 
From  Berkeley,  and  am  not  the  murdered  thing 
Whose  embalmed  ruins,  mangled  and  mis-shaped, 
Went  in  such  glory  to  its  burying ; 
About  whose  tomb  the  Benedictines  sing 
By  day  and  night,  and  pilgrims  offer  gold  . . . 
Words  cannot  tell  the  treasures  that  they  bring  . . . 
For  one  anointed,  whom  they  slew  of  old  .  .  . 
Or  think  they  did  (the  dogs)  the  story  shall  be  told. 

I  had  resigned  my  Crown :  my  Queen  preferred 
Mortimer  to  me ;  both  wanted  me  dead. 

106 


My  Son,  the  chosen  King,  Edward  the  Third, 
Seemed  (and  has  proved  himself),  a  better  head. 
Men  tried  to  kill  me  first  by  rotten  bread, 
By  want  of  sleep,  by  chainings  in  the  pit 
Chin-deep  in  garbage  where  the  blow-flies  fed. 
'A  natural  death,'  they  felt,  'would  be  more  fit .  .  . 
Murder  him,  yes,  but  leave  his  corpse  unmarked  by  it.' 

Still,  though  I  suffered,  I  was  little  hurt. 

Then  Keepers  changed,  and  treatment  became  kind. 

I  was  allowed  to  sleep,  and  cleansed  from  dirt. 

They  said,  still  gentler  treatment  was  designed. 

Knowing  my  foreign  Queen,  I  was  not  blind, 

I  knew  I  only  lived  from  day  to  day. 

Nearness  to  death  was  ever  in  my  mind. 

While  I  was  living,  I  was  in  her  way ; 

Even  if  she  were  dead,  her  paramour  would  slay. 

Yet,  for  the  nonce,  I  was  not  chained  nor  barred 
But  marked,  in  white  clothes,  as  a  prisoner  still, 
And  so  allowed  into  the  castle-yard 
And  on  the  leads,  and  ate  and  drank  my  fill. 
But  as  for  going  free  ...  an  iron  grille 
Unseen,  was  present,  and  a  watch  was  kept, 
Kept,  too,  by  gaolers  with  command  to  kill 
If  once  permitted  bounds  were  over-stept. 
An  eye  was  ever  on  me,  eye  that  never  slept. 

In  hazy  heat  the  blue  September  shone, 
The  apples  shewed  in  colour  through  the  leaves ; 
The  swallows  gathered  and  the  swifts  had  gone 
And  tendrils  withered  at  the  castle-eaves. 


107 


The  salt  had  come,  for  salting  of  the  beeves; 

And,  lo,  a  rider  there,  out  of  the  West. 

Mortimer's  Captain  from  the  border-thieves. 

I  knew  the  dog,  ambitious  and  unblest. 

I  thought  'The  hour  strikes;  they  put  all  to  the  test:' 

A  sudden  pang  of  terror  thrilled  me  through ; 
And  yet .  .  .  had  terror  now  sufficient  cause? 
There  had  been  shocking  danger,  as  I  knew, 
But  through  the  summer  danger  had  had  pause. 
Why  should  the  autumn  bring  the  tiger's  claws? 
Into  the  yard,  men  trundled  casks  of  beer, 
They  spiled  and  spigotted  amid  applause ; 
A  steward  called  'Come,  gather  for  good  cheer. 
Our  Harvest  Ale;  rejoice,  for  this  good  time  of  year.' 

That  did  not  sound  like  murder :  and  the  crowd 

Careering,  cheering,  passing  round  the  can, 

Was  all  delight  and  life ;  alive  and  loud. 

Sin  has  been  like  a  snake  since  it  began. 

Snake-like  the  rider  was,  Mortimer's  man. 

Murder  had  branded  him  for  men  to  see. 

But  sunset  was  my  daily  freedom's  span. 

My  jailers  (all  good  fellows)  came  for  me. 

They  led  me  to  my  room,  then  left,  and  turned  the  key. 

Lately,  my  room  was  lit  when  I  returned. 
Tonight,  it  was  just  dim  with  the  last  glow. 
No  candle  there,  nor  any  fire,  burned. 
I  stood  alone  and  felt  the  darkness  grow. 

108 


What  if  that  very  night  I  had  to  go 

Alone,  into  whatever  Death  might  bring? 

Death  terrifies  when  it  comes  sudden  so. 

Such  leaving  living  is  a  dreadful  thing  . . . 

Then,  from  my  curtained  bed  a  quiet  voice  said  'King 

Before  I  fell,  or  swooned,  or  cried, 

A  man  was  kneeling  at  my  side. 

'King,'  he  hissed,  'King.  I've  come  to  save  'ee 

Back  to  the  life  th'  Almighty  gave  'ee. 

The  one  who  sends  to  save  'ee  so 

Says  'Say,  "Saint  Margaret",  and  he'll  know.' 

All  this,  in  a  fierce  whispered  gasp. 
He  thrust  a  knife  into  my  grasp. 

The  words,  'Saint  Margaret',  truly  gave 
The  certainty  he  came  to  save. 

'So,  Friend,'  I  said,  'I  thought  aright. 
They  mean  to  murder  me  tonight?' 

'Yes;  but  St  Margaret  has  good  spies  . .  . 
First,  King,  put  on  this  gray  disguise.' 

I  did.  He  said  'Tonight's  the  time 
The  three  are  here  to  do  the  crime. 
But  midnight  doings  such  as  these 
Must  have  no  mortal  witnesses. 
To  prove  I'm  telling  true,  the  sounds 
That  rise  below  next,  will  be  hounds.' 

109 


And  at  his  words  with  laughing  thrill 
A  huntsman's  horn  below  blew  shrill, 
A  hunter  cheered,  the  hounds  gave  tongue 
Like  minster  bell-peals  being  rung. 

Someone  was  loosing  kennel  doors. 

I"  the  Court,  rejoicings  rose  in  roars, 

The  singers  at  the  Harvest-Ale, 

Might  have  aroused  all  Severn  Vale. 

What  with  the  hounds,  the  songs,  the  cheering 

All  devilry  of  Hell  seemed  nearing. 

'You  hear?'  the  man  said.  'Listen,  why, 
They  want  no  persons  to  be  by 
When  they  begin  on  what  they  plan. 
They'll  have  each  woman,  child  and  man 
Out  of  this  castle  in  ten  minutes. 
They'll  all  be  outaway  like  linnets, 
A-hunting  for  a  midnight  stag. 

This  afternoon  they  laid  a  drag 
(Red  herring  'twas,  away  up  top). 
They've  laid  a  bonfire  for  the  stop ; 
And  any  one  who  gets  so  far 
Can  get  blind  drunk  till  Morning  Star, 
They've  cakes  and  ale  enough  to  sink 
All  dwellers  here  with  food  and  drink. 
There'll  be  none  here,  to  hear  or  see. 

Step  to  the  wall,  King,  to  the  slit .  . . 
I  think  they've  got  the  bonfire  lit.' 

no 


They  had :  the  wold-top  had  a  glow. 

'Now,  King,'  he  said,  'Hark  here  to  me  .  .  . 
You  are  a  fighting-man,  I  know, 
You  played  a  pretty  sword  as  Prince? 

Myself: 

Yes,  but  have  lost  all  practice  since. 

The  Man: 
'True,  but  we  have  surprise  tonight. 
Surprise  is  more  than  half  a  fight. 
And  their  command  is  'Kill  him  clean; 
Let  never  blood  or  wound  be  seen.' 
They'll  have  no  knives:  ourselves  have  two.' 

Below,  the  trumpet  and  halloo 

And  tumult  of  the  hunters  grew 

Drink  had  so  flown  that  all  men  yelled, 

The  hounds,  made  frantic,  were  still  held, 

While  drunken  men  with  hoick  and  hark 

Made  every  dog  in  hearing  bark. 

A  sergeant  of  the  castle  guard 

Shouted  'Get  ready,  all;  hold  hard  .  .  . 

Three  cheers,  boys;  one,  two,  three  .  .  .  Away.' 

Then  with  a  roar  the  whole  array, 

Riders,  men,  women,  children,  all 

Rushed  after  hounds  with  cheer  and  bawl, 

The  hounds  in  cry,  the  huntsman  horning, 

All  folk  in  yell  like  Judgment  Morning. 

The  tumult  lessened  up  the  hill. 

in 


The  fortress  of  my  jail  was  still 
Save  for  one  drunkard  whom  I  heard 
Mocking  the  June-glad  turtle-bird; 
Sometimes  he  cock-a-doodle-dood. 

The  castle  was  a  solitude, 

The  hunting  uproar  failed  and  died. 

There  was  a  stealthy  step  outside, 
Someone  came  dragging  something  there 
Onto  the  landing  from  the  stair, 
Thence  to  a  little  room  next  mine. 
What  part  was  this  in  the  design? 
What  did  he  drag,  that  seemed  like  stuff, 
But  yet  had  scarcely  room  enough? 

The  dragger  dumped  the  thing,  and  turned, 
And  suddenly  a  lantern  burned: 
Someone  had  thrust  it  on  the  floor 
Outside,  within  the  corridor. 

Then,  as  the  sounds  made  us  aware, 
Two  men  came  cursing  what  they  bare, 
Something  with  fiery  crumbs  that  fell 
That  made  them  curse  by  Death  and  Hell, 
A  brazier,  as  I  judged,  alight. 
They  were  two  creatures  of  the  night, 
Footsteps  and  curses  were  all  muffled. 

Words  muttered  and  the  footsteps  shuffled 
In  the  next  room,  preparing  crime. 

112 


The  doing  took  a  little  time 
Then  they  went  down;  then,  a  door  closed 
(The  sergeants'  mess-door,  I  supposed). 
The  castle  seemed  devoid  of  men. 

The  drunkard  hooted  now  and  then. 

'King,'  the  man  said,  'The  time  is  near. 
The  man  will  bring  your  supper  here. 
Bread  manchets,  and  an  earthen  jug 
Of  pottage  mixed  with  sleepy  drug, 
To  stun  you  with;  the  man's  the  boor 
They  call  Black  Lousy  or  the  Moor. 
I  think  he'll  come  alone  tonight . . . 

If  so,  he  must  not  bark  nor  bite. 

He'll  put  your  supper  on  the  floor, 
And  fumble  to  unlock  the  door  . . . 
The  instant  the  door  opens,  King, 
Heave  it  wide  open,  with  a  swing, 
Before  he  knows  whose  pig  has  died 
I'll  have  him,  with  his  keys,  inside, 
With  a  bat  upon  his  head  or  so. 

But  life  is  troublous  here  below. 
The  dog  may  come  with  all  the  three, 
Still,  swing  the  door  and  take  the  key, 
I'll  see  the  Moor  laid  quiet ;  then 
We  two  will  knife  the  other  men. 


ii3 


Remember,  King,  they'll  have  no  knives, 

They  dare  not  knife  you  for  their  lives. 

'No  bloodshed,'  say  these  dogs  of  sin, 

'But  burn  his  insides  out  within' : 

That's  why  they've  brought  the  brazier  there.' 

Again  the  terror  in  me  stirred; 
Who  was  this  fellow  who  had  heard 
All  the  whole  plot  to  murder  me? 
A  man  whose  face  I  could  not  see  .  .  . 
A  sudden  secret  man  unknown, 
And  vouched  for  by  two  words  alone. 
Could  he  be  Murderer  the  First, 
The  falsest,  deadliest  and  worst? 

He  said,  'My  King,  all  will  be  well. 

St  Margaret  against  all  Hell. 

St  Margaret  knows  what  they  intend 

And  she's  a  friend,  and  I'm  a  friend, 

We'll  get  you  out  tonight  I  trust, 

We've  starlight  in  us  besides  dust. 

You  swing  the  door  back,  King,  and  trust.' 

'I  do,'  I  said,  I  shook  his  hand. 

'But,  friend,  my  murder  has  been  planned 

By  men  who  will  pursue  until 

At  last  they  run  me  down  and  kill . . . 

What  if  I  do  escape  from  here?' 

'A  Saint'll  help  from  far  and  near' 
He  answered,  'Now,  get  ready,  sure, 
Behind  the  door,  here  comes  the  Moor.' 

114 


Below  upon  the  stair,  the  singer 

Was  certainly  my  supper-bringer. 

He  sang  or  gurgled  lines  and  snatches 

Of  drinking-songs  and  three-man  catches. 

He  was  alone  -  or  was  he?  Yes  .  .  . 

I  took  my  place  in  readiness. 

My  comrade  gripped  his  bludgeon  handle 

The  Moor  set  down  his  tray  and  candle 

Outside  my  door 

'These  Kings,'  said  he. 
He  had  some  trouble  with  the  key 
(The  wards  caught  in  his  belt,  I  think.) 
'Hey  piggy,  swill-time,  come  and  drink.' 
He  called  'You  Edward,  come,  sup  sorrow. 
You'll  have  few  body-slaves  tomorrow.' 

Then,  kicking  at  the  door,  he  bawled, 
'Come  out,  you  Edward,  when  you're  called.' 
While  fitting-in  the  key  he  cursed : 
Then  kicked,  and  shoved,  and  in  he  burst. 
The  bludgeon  stretched  him  on  the  floor. 
We  dragged  his  body  from  the  door, 
Then  locked  him  in  and  took  the  key. 

We  listened  for  where  foes  might  be. 

The  bats  about  the  battlement 

Were  shrilling  as  they  came  and  went. 

Some  horses  were  below,  at  food, 
Stamping  and  munching  as  they  stood. 

115 


I  wondered  whose  the  horses  were 
I  had  not  heard  them  enter  there. 

Near  them,  the  drunken  man  still  sat 
Mewing,  at  odd  times,  like  a  cat. 

No  other  noise  of  living  men 
Stirred  in  the  vast  grim  prison  pen. 

Then,  as  we  listened  there,  we  heard 
Below,  not  near,  that  some-one  stirred. 
A  door  was  opened,  a  voice  cried 
'Is  that  you,  Lousy?'  none  replied. 

After  some  seconds,  the  door  closed. 

The  coast  was  clear  as  we  supposed. 
Now  by  the  light  in  that  grim  place 
I  first  beheld  my  comrade's  face, 
A  good  face  for  a  troublous  time. 

What  had  they  readied  for  the  crime, 

In  that  next  room  three  paces  thence? 

A  pan  of  fire,  smoking  dense, 

Some  rags  and  ropes  and  thoughts  of  hell. 

'Come,  King'  my  comrade  said,  'All's  well . . .' 

He  led  the  way  to  a  stair's  shaft 

Up  which  the  cool  night  blew  a  draft. 

Downstairs,  he  led,  making  no  sound. 
In  a  dark  dimness,  round  on  round, 
Feeling  for  steps  we  could  not  see, 
Each  step  a  freedom  won  for  me. 

116 


Sudden,  his  reached  hand  halted  me. 

The  drunken  man  had  changed  his  note, 

He  bleated  like  a  nanny  goat. 

The  munching  of  the  nags  was  clear 

I  heard  no  sound  of  danger  near. 

My  friend  leaned  back  and  whispered  close  .  .  . 

'A  sentry's  there  ...  his  shadow  shows .  .  . 

The  wall  there  .  .  .  when  the  rushlight  blows 

I  craned :  I  peered :  the  wall  below, 
Rush-lighted,  had  a  shadow  show 
The  helmed  head  of  a  man-at-arms, 
Ready  to  smite  or  raise  alarms. 

I  whispered  'Friend  ...  it's  neck  or  knives.' 

The  thing  men  dread  seldom  arrives : 
Just  as  we  tiptoed  down  to  dare 
The  terror  vanished  into  air. 
The  helmed  head  was  a  shadow  thrown 
From  a  carved  column  on  the  stone. 

We  passed  .  .  .  we  felt  the  cool  damp  grace 

Of  autumn  mist  on  hand  and  face, 

The  horses  lifted  heads,  and  blew  . . . 

We  passed:  and  then  'One  moment . .  .  you'. 

A  sleeper  by  the  horses  roused  .  .  . 

He  caught  me  by  the  sleeve,  half-drowsed. 

117 


'Is  the  work  finished  yet,  upstairs?' 
Friends,  I  was  taken  unawares, 
But  something  checked  me;  not  to  kill, 
This  was  some  stable-boy  who  knew 
Nothing  of  what  men  meant  to  do  .  .  . 
'Why,  no,'  I  said,  'Nor  will  be  yet .  .  . 
Son,  lie  you  down,  sleep  and  forget .  .  . 
They'll  call  you  .  .  .  you're  to  carry  word?' 
I'll  guess  you're  the  Queen's  pigeon-bird?' 

'Yes,'  the  lad  said,  'Our  lovely  Queen  . . .' 

'The  loveliest  lady  ever  seen,' 

I  said,  'God  send  her  lovelier  men  .  .  . 

Now  sleep.'  The  boy  lay  down  agen. 

We  were  in  mist :  we  were  in  dew : 
We  heard  the  midnight  owls  tu-whoo, 
We  trod  the  yard,  we  passed  the  gate. 
Some  cottagers  were  still  up  late 
Eyeing  the  ruddy  distant  glare, 
The  bonfire  where  the  hunters  were. 
'Good  night,'  they  said,  'Good  night,'  said  I. 

There  was  the  Pole  Star  in  the  sky, 
This  England's  Hope  Star  never  dead  .  . . 
We  kept  the  track  as  the  star  led. 

Soon,  in  a  copse,  was  my  Saint  Margaret  friend 
With  horses,  money,  letters,  and  a  scheme 
To  bring  my  present  dangers  to  an  end : 
She  brought  a  dawning  to  my  night's  extreme. 

118 


I  was  afar  when  morning  'gan  to  gleam; 

I  was  in  safety  when  I  stopped  to  rest ; 

Kingdom  and  Queen  and  peril  all  a  dream, 

Naught  but  confusion  without  interest, 

My  past  sponged  from  the  slate,  my  future  manifest. 

A  year  from  thence,  again  she  rescued  me 

(My  enemies  suspected  where  I  hid) ; 

Hearing  the  plot  she  plucked  me  over  sea 

Her  spirit  wrought  whatever  minds  forbid. 

I  traversed  France  my  direst  foes  amid. 

Here  on  her  bounty  now  I  live  in  peace, 

Hermit,  in  Italy,  forever  rid 

Of  earth's  rebellions,  I  enjoy  release 

And  find  that  lacking  much  assures  the  soul's  increase. 


KING  EDWARD   S   PRAYER 

O  King  of  all  things  Who  appointed  me 
To  rule  a  Kingdom  from  an  earthly  throne, 
And  saw  me  humbled  from  that  dignity 
Because  of  fault  in  measure  seldom  known, 

0  King,  Who  helped  when  I  was  all  alone, 
Setting  a  light  in  one  remembering  heart 
That  fused  the  lock  and  smote  aside  the  stone 
So  that  I  dwell  forgotten  and  apart, 

Nothing  as  living  man  but  conscious  what  Thou  art, 

1  do  beseech  Thee  to  remember  Her 
Who  in  my  peril,  saved  me  out  of  ward; 

119 


Let  elemental  angels  minister 

As  her  defences  ever,  helm  and  sword. 

Gladden  her  grasses,  let  her  barns  be  stored 

With  cattle,  poultry,  grain,  corn,  honey,  wine, 

Whatever  sun  and  earth  and  rain  afford, 

Whatever  wealth  I  gladdened-in,  when  mine, 

And  may  her  soul  help  men  to  make  this  Kingdom  Thine. 

Here,  in  the  twilight,  in  a  foreign  cell, 

I  pray  for  her,  that  Margaret  the  Blest, 

Who  snatched  me  from  the  pangs  of  plotted  Hell, 

And  still  lives  Severn-wards,  or  further  West, 

A  relic  still  of  all  I  loved  the  best, 

That  woman  in  the  darkness  scarcely  seen 

There  at  the  cross-roads  under  Birdlip  Crest, 

She  who  preserved  me  from  what  would  have  been, 

O  may  her  skies  be  blue,  her  sunny  pathways  green. 


120 


A  CRY  TO  MUSIC 

Speak  to  us,  Music,  for  the  discord  jars; 

The  world's  unwisdom  brings  or  threatens  Death. 

Speak,  and  redeem  this  misery  of  breath 

With  that  which  keeps  the  stars 

Each  to  her  point  in  the  eternal  wheel 

That  all  clear  skies  reveal. 

Speak  to  us;  lift  the  nightmare  from  us;  sing. 
The  screams  of  chaos  make  the  daylight  mad. 
Where  are  the  dew-drenched  mornings  that  we  had 
When  the  lithe  lark  took  wing? 
Where  the  still  summers,  when  more  golden  time 
Spoke  to  us,  from  the  lime? 

Though  these  be  gone,  yet,  still,  Thy  various  voice 

May  help  assuage  the  pangs  of  our  distress, 

May  hush  the  yelling  where  the  fiends  rejoice, 

Quiet  the  sleepless,  making  sorrow  less. 

Speak,  therefore,  Music;  speak. 

Calm  our  despair ;  bring  courage  to  the  weak. 

Ah,  lovely  Friend,  bring  wisdom  to  the  strong, 
Before  a  senseless  strength  has  all  destroyed. 
Be  sunlight  on  the  night  of  brooding  wrong. 
Be  form  upon  the  chaos  of  the  void. 
Be  Music ;  be  Thyself;  a  prompting  given 
Of  Peace,  of  Beauty  waiting,  and  sin  shriven. 

121 


THE  PRINCESS  MALINAL 

'Destiny's  Sword,'  this  Cortes,  whom  you  praise? 
He  was  'Malinche',  in  his  earlier  days 
Ere  conquest  was,  or  chance  of  it  began. 
What  does  'Malinche'  mean?  'Malinal's  Man'. 
My  Man,  for  I  am  Malinal,  my  friends, 
One  used  by  Destiny  for  marvellous  ends. 
I,  Malinal,  through  whom  it  came  to  pass 
That  Mexico  was  mown  like  the  ripe  grass. 

What  was  that  Mexico?  No  old  estate, 
Wise  with  long  centuries  of  splendid  Fate, 
No,  but  a  land  whose  heart-blood  soaked  the  sods 
In  daily  sacrifice  to  loathsome  gods, 
Brought  to  us  by  the  Aztec  conqueror 
In  lust  and  terror  three  men's  lives  before, 
Who  were  the  Aztecs?  No  man  living  knows. 
Grim  warriors  from  the  desert,  bearing  bows. 

I  am  the  Daughter  of  a  Prince  whose  realm 
The  Aztecs  taxed,  but  did  not  overwhelm. 

There,  in  my  youth,  the  Prince,  my  Father,  died. 
Another  Kinglet  of  that  countryside 
Married  my  Mother,  and  they  had  a  Son. 

122 


My  childhood  thence  was  an  unhappy  one. 
I  was  a  pest  of  which  they  would  be  rid 
But  shrank  from  killing ; 

this  is  what  they  did. 
They  gave  me  as  a  pupil  to  a  band 
Of  minstrel-dancers  roving  through  the  land 
Singing  and  miming  many  an  ancient  lay. 
And,  as  a  slave-girl  died  that  very  day, 
They  said  that  Princess  Malinal  had  died, 
And  buried  her,  as  me,  in  princely  pride, 
While  I,  the  Princess,  went  as  Fortune  willed. 

But,  yet,  those  Indians  of  the  dancing  guild 
As  Indians  of  our  old  religion,  knew 
That  gods  allot  a  rank  as  Justice  due, 
To  them,  I  was  Princess,  born  to  great  things, 
They  tended  me  in  all  our  wanderings, 
They  taught  me  all  the  dancing  and  the  mime 
That  helped  all  songs  of  the  heroic  time 
And  wandering  always  up  and  down  the  land 
I  learned  the  tongues  and  came  to  understand 
What  hot  intensity  of  hate  and  dread 
King  Montezuma  and  his  priesthood  bred. 
For  all  her  beauty  Mexico  was  hell, 
The  tribes  about  her  panted  to  rebel. 

Among  our  singings  to  the  passers-by, 
There  was  a  poem  of  a  prophecy, 
That  when  the  appointed  centuries  had  run 
Then,  from  the  sea,  the  Children  of  the  Sun, 
A  pale-faced  people  coming  in  strange  ships, 

123 


Would  put  our  ancient  glories  in  eclipse 
And  govern  Mexico  from  sea  to  sea  .  .  . 
Our  hearers  prayed  that  this  might  swiftly  be, 
And  signs  were  present  that  the  time  was  near, 

A  pale-faced  set  of  seamen  had  put  fear, 
Some  years  before,  along  our  eastern  coast, 
One  of  those  seamen,  looking  like  a  ghost 
Was  shown  to  me,  slave  to  an  eastern  chief. 
'I  came  for  gold,'  he  said,  'But  have  found  grief.' 

My  childhood  passed;  and  soon,  with  gun  and  horse, 

The  pale-face  from  the  sunrise  came  in  force, 

No  Children  of  the  Sun,  but  landless  braves, 

Seeking  for  gold  and  concubines  and  slaves ; 

Devils  they  seemed,  with  slaughter  in  command, 

Bent  both  to  plunder  and  possess  the  land. 

The  country  chieftains  rallied  and  attacked, 

The  Spaniards  stood:  the  coastal  towns  were  sacked, 

And  in  the  war,  that  Spaniard  was  set  free 

Who,  like  a  corpse's  ghost,  had  talked  to  me. 

He  spoke  our  tongue,  and  was  a  prize  untold, 

Worth  more  to  Cortes  then  than  any  gold. 

Now,  after  battle  murderous  to  both, 

He  could  speak  peace :  the  Indians  were  not  loath. 

There  after  battle,  through  this  rescued  slave, 
A  treaty  sprang ;  one  promised,  one  forgave. 
The  Indians  (who  forgave)  promised  to  send 
Gifts  as  a  splendid  pledge  that  wars  should  end. 

124 


I,  Malinal,  began  then,  as  I  deem, 

Life  became  action  that  had  been  a  dream. 

Suddenly,  Chieftains  let  their  subjects  know 
That  twenty  of  their  prettiest  girls  should  go 
Among  the  many  gifts  of  gold  and  food, 
Raiment  and  cloth,  to  make  the  treaty  good. 
A  hundred  girls  cast  lots,  one  from  each  five, 
To  mix  with  gods  whom  we  thought  death  to  wive, 
There  I,  by  Fate  appointed,  stood  aghast.  . . 
I,  a  Princess,  one  of  the  twenty  cast. 

Rail  not  at  Fate  and  strive  to  be  forgiving, 

Justice  is  ever  done  on  all  things  living. 

I,  Malinal,  a  Princess  born,  perceived 

These  things  were  men,  not  gods  as  we  believed, 

Men  of  an  unknown  type,  exceeding  strange, 

But  men  of  power,  able  to  bring  change, 

Eager  to  change,  and  my  young  spirit  knew 

My  woman's  wit  could  guide  them  what  to  do. 

I  saw,  at  once,  that  these  might  rip  to  wreck 

The  Aztec  chains  about  the  subject  neck, 

Destroy  the  accursed  priests  upon  the  stairs 

Red  with  the  hearts  torn  to  those  gods  of  theirs; 

And  free  from  tyranny  and  tax  and  dread 

All  native  tribes  as  yet  not  stricken  dead; 

This  I  perceived;  and,  then  .  .  .  that  slave  set  free  . .  . 

Who  knew  our  tongues  could  teach  and  answer  me. 

I  am  a  Princess  born;  no  thing  of  shame, 
I  was  their  Queen  in  everything  but  name, 

125 


A  Queen  quick-witted,  too,  swiftly  aware 
Of  rivals  plotting  against  Cortes  there. 
Spaniards  in  Cuba,  grim  ambitious  men 
Arming  to  fight  his  army,  even  then. 
Meaning  to  seize  his  conquests  and  be  great 
By  his  adventurings,  those  dogs  of  hate. 

There,  in  the  West,  in  Mexico,  our  King, 
Great  Montezuma  watched  what  time  would  bring, 
Hoping  that,  where  we  lay,  his  eastern  chiefs 
Would  slaughter  all  these  pirates  of  his  fiefs. 
Presuming  on  these  hopes,  he  would  do  naught 
But  send  fair  words . . . 

such  was  this  woman's  thought. 

And  thinking  thus,  I  saw  the  chances  given. 
Slow  is  man's  pace;  swift  is  the  light  of  Heaven. 
Northward  and  westward  still  some  tribes  remained 
Doomed  by  the  Aztecs  but  not  yet  enchained; 
These,  I  perceived,  would  come  at  Cortes'  call, 
With  these  as  allies  Mexico  might  fall. 

Clear  in  each  detail  all  the  project  showed. 
Instant  the  scheme,  but  difficult  the  road, 
Yet  daily,  Cortes  found  my  instinct  true, 
We  made  strong  friends,  advanced  and  overthrew, 
We  crossed  the  snowy  stones  in  the  bleak  blast, 
We  reached  the  marvel  of  the  world  at  last; 
We,  scarce  four  hundred  men,  achieved  the  way, 
The  darkness  brightened:  there  the  City  lay. 

126 


Could  it  exist,  or  did  it  only  seem, 

That  shining  thing,  that  city  of  a  dream? 

We,  who  had  come  from  deserts  and  from  snows, 

Saw  a  blue  lake,  from  which  the  temples  rose ; 

Blue  as  the  Heaven  the  lake,  the  city  bright 

With  burnished  lime  too  glitteringly  white  . . . 

The  lake  dotted  with  barges,  crossed  by  ways 

Thronged  with  such  crowds  it  put  us  in  amaze, 

The  crowds  so  glorious  with  gold  and  gear 

That  liker  birds  than  men  they  did  appear  . . . 

But  then  the  birds  were  there,  brighter  than  they, 

The  humming  bird,  flamingo,  popinjay, 

In  trees  so  decked  with  fruit,  scarlet  and  gold, 

So  fragrant  with  sweet  gums,  of  worth  untold, 

In  grass  so  green,  with  flowers  so  red  and  white 

That  all  was  the  soul's  marvel  and  delight, 

All  a  conspiring  culminating  thing, 

For  gold,  above  all  metal  else,  the  King, 

The  gold-deckt,  feather-gleaming  Montezume, 

Whose  Paradise  had  this  for  ante-room. 

Was  this,  the  death-trap  that  our  allies  feared? 
This  marvel,  more  a  marvel  as  we  neared? 
To  mortal  men  alive  beneath  the  Sun 
Some  cups  are  there  to  drink,  and  this  was  one. 
And  though  our  allies  bade  us,  'O  beware, 
Never  go  in,  for  they  will  kill  you  there.* 
I  trusted  in  my  instinct  what  to  do, 
MalinaTs  Man,  Malinche,  trusted,  too. 

Yet,  being  in  the  city,  doubts  and  fears 

Sprang  to  my  mind  as  whispers  reached  my  ears. 

127 


We  held  a  builded  island  in  a  lake, 

Deep  water  round  us,  this  was  one  mistake. 

To  reach  the  shore  were  causeways  not  our  own, 

Causeways  with  bridges  easily  o'erthrown; 

Easily  barred,  or  taken  in  the  flank 

By  archers  in  canoes  from  either  bank. 

Malinche  had  no  fear :  I  doubted  ...  I. 

We  lived  in  splendour,  and  the  days  went  by. 

There,  in  the  splendour  I  interpreted 

For  both  the  leaders  and  the  chiefs  they  led, 

Perceiving  clearly  that  the  lust  for  gold 

In  Cortes'  captains  would  not  be  controlled, 

And  that  the  Aztecs  were  of  one  advice, 

To  give  us  to  their  gods  in  sacrifice. 

There,  in  the  splendour,  I  was  swiftly  sure 

That  peace,  near  so  much  gold,  could  not  endure, 

That  war,  near  so  much  hatred,  must  be  close, 

Though  falsehood  in  both  chiefs  contrived  a  gloze. 

Having  beheld  the  gold,  it  was  not  long 
Before  Malinche  launched  into  the  wrong, 
Seized  Montezuma's  person  and  prepared 
To  fight  for  all  that  gold,  if  any  dared. 

Before  that  moment  came,  his  Cuban  foes 
In  greed  and  envy  thought  to  interpose ; 
Having  great  friends  in  Spain  they  gathered  men 
From  all  the  landless  lusts  in  Cuba  then ; 

128 


Having  great  wealth,  they  armed  a  fleet  of  ships 
And  planning  battle,  murder  and  eclipse, 
Westward  they  sailed,  just  at  that  touch  of  time 
When  Cortes'  spirit  swayed  twixt  peace  and  crime. 
Straightway  they  landed  near  our  harbour  base, 
Three  times  our  strength  to  bring  us  to  disgrace, 
To  seize  our  havings,  and  with  hate  and  greeds 
Snatch  all  the  crop  where  we  had  sown  the  seeds ; 

This  at  the  moment  when  our  fortunes  there 
Within  the  city,  swayed  upon  a  hair. 

Friends,  any  instant's  peril  raised  a  thirst 
In  Cortes'  heart  to  meet  the  peril  first. 
Back  to  his  base  he  marched;  by  force  and  guile 
He  quelled  that  peril  in  a  little  while ; 
By  tact  and  bribes  he  won  his  beaten  foes 
To  help  him  bring  his  conquests  to  a  close. 
Westward  to  Mexico  he  marched  in  pride, 
As  conquering  King  I  saw  Malinche  ride. 


Brightly  his  star  had  shone,  but  now  it  paled; 
His  foes  were  quelled,  but  now  disease  assailed. 
A  negro  slave  brought  by  the  Cubans  West 
Died  there  of  small-pox  spreading  death  and  pest. 
As  sudden  windflaws  fan  a  spark  to  blaze, 
So  did  that  one  infection  kill  and  craze, 
Many  among  us  died,  and  all  who  died 
Spread  death  and  dying  through  the  countryside. 

129 


Like  forest-fire,  in  a  gale  it  spread, 
That  spotted  evil,  smiting  thousands  dead; 
And  ere  we  breathed  (the  Cuban  danger  quelled) 
As  one  mad  man  all  Mexico  rebelled. 

Rage  upon  rage,  with  Montezuma  killed, 

All  my  instinctive  terrors  were  fulfilled. 

Now  in  the  midnight  came  the  fearful  snowing 

Of  stones  and  darts,  death-horns,  death-whistles  blowing, 

The  causeways  blocked,  the  bridges  cut,  the  lake 

Thronged  with  canoes  to  spear  us  or  to  take. 

In  battle,  in  rain  falling,  we  were  driven 

(The  few  survivors)  from  our  shining  Heaven 

Hunted  like  starving  dogs,  stoned,  sleepless,  hurt, 

Stumbling  and  fighting,  blind  with  blood  and  dirt. 

Leaving  our  wounded  to  the  priesthood's  knives 

On  altars  clotted  black  with  Spanish  lives, 

Or  drowning  in  the  water  weighted  down 

With  cursed  gold  from  that  accursed  town  .  .  . 

Now  burning,  smoking  ruin  heaped  with  dead. 

Before  the  dawn,  we  halted  as  we  fled 
To  bind  our  bleedings  underneath  the  tree, 
Malinal's  Man  there  asked  advice  of  me. 

Friends,  my  advice  decided  Mexico. 

No  other  of  us  knew  to  whom  to  go; 
No  other  than  myself  knew  what  could  save. 
The  counsel  none  but  I  could  give  I  gave. 
I  told  what  Indian  allies  would  be  true. 

130 


And  true  they  were,  and  so  I  speak  to  you; 
And  Cortes  won  the  land  from  sea  to  sea. 

Long  afterwards,  we  travelled,  I  and  he, 
Through  Mexico,  to  make  new  ways  begin. 
I,  Malinal,  again  beheld  my  Kin, 
Mother,  Step-father  and  usurping  heir, 
All  terror-stricken,  kneeling  in  the  glare, 
1,  Malinal,  might  judge  in  my  own  case. 

I  took  my  Mother  into  my  embrace : 
I  cried,  *0  welcome,  Mother,  to  your  own. 
Step-father,  too ;  let  gladnesses  atone. 
Little  half-brother,  whom  I  hardly  knew, 
O  welcome,  all . . .  let  life  begin  anew.' 

But  what  is  Life?  A  something  swift  and  strange 
Fulfilling  justice  in  eternal  change; 
A  passage  to  perfection  and  decline 
Through  hopes  unspeakable  in  waste  design ; 
A  something  ever  helped  by  things  unseen 
That  glorifies  the  King  and  crowns  the  Queen, 
That  makes  an  empire  rise,  a  Kingdom  die, 
By  one  like  Cortes  linked  with  such  as  I. 


131 


MEMORIES 

Now  that  the  leaves  are  withered,  fallen,  or  falling, 
Their  greenness  is  a  ghost  beyond  recalling. 

Yet,  of  those  ghosts  of  greenness,  to  a  ghost, 
Which  awakes  joy,  and  is  remembered  most? 

Which,  in  the  cuckoo-time  of  blue-bell  May, 
Promised  most  marvel  on  the  kindled  spray, 

Seemed  most  alive? 

Thus,  as  survivors  use, 
I  think  of  withered  leaves  and  strive  to  choose. 

Out  of  the  hundreds  of  remembered  dead 
Of  days  long  past,  comes  one  illumined  head, 

The  cloaked  and  sworded  foreign  Prince  who  sought 
To  try  all  feeling  and  to  plumb  all  thought ; 

The  Palace-born,  from  infancy  made  wise, 
In  all  the  graces  and  the  courtesies, 

Reminding  all  of  Gautama,  the  Prince, 

Who  gave  up  home  and  Kingdom  centuries  since, 

132 


To  seek,  in  inmost  thought's  intensest  air, 
A  meaning  in  the  ills  that  mortals  bear, 
A  hope  of  ending  of  the  burden  borne. 

Like  Gautama,  that  Star  of  the  forlorn, 
His  spirit  struggled,  inly  consecrate 
To  wander  Hell  until  he  found  a  gate. 

Like  Gautama,  he  moved  men  as  he  stood 
In  the  pale  beauty  of  his  hardihood. 

Like  Gautama,  his  Vision  unattained, 

He  moved  men  so,  the  thought  of  him  remained. 

On  vastly  different  tracks  we  had  to  tread 
And  life's  divergence  made  him  as  one  dead. 

And  Life  imposed  its  multitudes  and  miles 

And  Change,  and  Chance,  for  many  weary  whiles. 

Often  all  unexpected  and  unsought 

Comes  the  completion  of  profoundest  thought. 

A  generation  made  his  memory  dim ; 

I  was  far  hence,  and  had  no  thought  of  him. 

I  watched  the  sunburnt  men  in  vintage-time, 
I  passed  them  up  the  hill  I  had  to  climb. 

I  clambered  stairs,  upon  whose  balustrade 
Grotesque  great  gourds  of  green  and  gold  were  laid. 

133 


And  passing  these,  upon  the  topmost  stair, 
He  called  me  by  my  name,  for  he  was  there. 

Changed,  as  a  Prince  is  changed,  who  becomes  King, 
Well  might  the  grape-men  of  the  vineyard  sing. 

He  had  attained  the  Light  under  his  tree. 
A  sunlit  day,  a  sunburned  day  to  me. 


134 


MIDDLE  FARM 

or 
THE  CHERRIES 

'Cherries  and  bread,  for  Man's  delight,  and  need, 
His  pleasure  and  his  very  life,  the  two, 
Fostered  by  sun  and  rain,  and  soil  and  seed, 
And  by  the  sweat  of  Man,  the  season  through. 
Bases  of  all  that  mortals  are  and  do; 
Sweet  juice  and  corn,  that  never  did  men  harm/ 
So  my  thought  runs  at  Harwell  Middle  Farm. 

In  April  woods,  the  white  wild-cherry-flowers 

Toss  in  their  glory  before  leaves  appear. 

Banners  and  vanguard  of  the  jolly  hours, 

The  blackbird  hatched,  cuckoo  and  swallow  near. 

And  though  the  blossom  bring  but  fruit  austere 

That  only  birds  enjoy,  this  April  white 

Is  Spring,  her  very  self,  and  man's  delight. 

Once,  far  away,  past  Troy,  the  rich-in-gold, 
Before  the  ship-wright's  axe  the  forests  felled, 
Great,  sweet,  transparent  cherries  grew  of  old, 
There,  where  the  Amazonian  hunters  dwelled, 
Exquisite,  healing  cherries,  precious  held, 
So  that  when  Asia  fell  to  conquering  Rome, 
Captain  Lucullus  carried  cuttings  home. 

135 


Two  thousand  years  have  gone,  since  those  two  stocks 

(Crossed  with  how  many  others?)  have  been  tried 

Among  the  bees  at  each  Spring  Equinox, 

By  countless  testers,  ever  watchful-eyed. 

From  many  a  climate,  many  a  country-side, 

The  variants  come,  too  many  for  my  tale, 

Sweet,  bitter,  bitter-sweet,  black,  scarlet,  pale. 

Though  the  unknown  may  ever  seem  more  fair 
Than  the  dull  known  of  every  day's  event, 
Though  many  wonders  may  be,  or  once  were, 
One  little  island  is  our  continent; 
England's  our  life,  of  joy  or  discontent, 
And  we,  who  sail  so  far,  had  better  turn 
To  English  fields,  the  cherry-lore  to  learn. 

There  is  a  gray  stretch  of  the  Berkshire  chalk, 

Horn  Down,  and  Harwell  Field,  and  Hagbourne  Hill 

Where  pale  blue  flowers  crown  the  chicory  stalk 

In  late  Julys  whenever  corn-ears  fill, 

Below,  where  the  springs  burst  and  the  brooks  trill, 

Long  centuries  since,  men  found  that  cherries  throve 

For  Harwell  Man's  perpetual  treasure-trove. 

Thus  it  is  still,  in  all  this  quiet  scene, 
In  old-time  fields,  in  farms  that  Doomsday  knew, 
The  Cherry  governs  as  the  Harvest  Queen 
And  world-wide  crossings  stock  the  fields  anew. 
The  sun,  the  Earth,  the  bees,  the  rain,  the  dew, 
These  five  remain,  and  man's  inspired  skill 
Beguiles  the  five  to  bring  the  Cherry  still. 

136 


Though  there  be  aptitude  in  soil  that  feeds 
Or  holds  especial  guard  that  may  avail, 
With  life  and  safety,  certain  stocks  and  seeds, 
(And  such-like  cherish  Cherries  in  the  Vale), 
Yet  it  is  manly  efforts  that  prevail 
Against  the  odds,  hard  work,  unceasing  care, 
Insight  and  skill,  that  bring  the  Cherries  there. 

For  when  the  dead  year's  leaves  go  lingering  past 
In  dense  November  drizzle,  to  the  soil, 
And  tired  Nature  goes  to  rest  at  last, 
Her  last  red  apples  hoarded-up  as  spoil, 
Then  men,  just  done  with  harvest,  begin  toil, 
Begin  again  the  old  work  everywhere 
Another  Summer's  cherries  to  prepare. 

They  clean  the  fields  and  burn :  the  bonfires  smoke : 

They  plough,  manure  and  prune :  they  plant  young  trees : 

They  hack  the  tangles  where  the  ditches  choke : 

They  spray  the  orchards  against  all  disease. 

And  March,  with  lengthening  light,  brings  lesser  ease  .  .  . 

Battles  with  Codlin-Moth,  the  planters'  grief, 

Sawfly,  Red  Spider,  Scab  and  Silver-Leaf. 

Then  April  comes,  with  blossom  and  suspense, 

Lest  frost  should  blast,  or  tempest  sweep  away, 

And  hourly  the  warfare  grows  more  tense 

As  sunshine  hatches-out  the  pests  of  May. 

The  summer  comes  with  watching  and  with  spray, 

Laburnum-time,  syringa-time,  and  June, 

When  Jack  of  Dover  goes  to  bed  at  noon. 

137 


Then  (after  dog-rose  time)  the  English  rose, 

High  summer,  and  red  cherry,  and  full  joy, 

The  nightless  summer  when  the  cuckoo  goes, 

When  every  bird  is  as  a  little  boy, 

A  winged  imp,  to  threaten  and  annoy, 

To  peck  the  ripening  cherries,  and  to  thieve 

The  sweet-fleshed  fruit  from  dewy  dawn  to  eve. 

Then,  when  all  seems  assured,  the  fight  begins, 
From  before  summer  dawn  till  cats  are  gray, 
Rattles  and  pebbles  within  shaken  tins, 
Clackage  and  scarecrows  to  keep  birds  away ; 
And  men  with  shotguns  all  the  summer  day 
Shot  after  shot ;  much  battle,  but  few  dead, 
Wherever  birds  are  swift  or  cherries  red. 

And  as  the  battle  bangs,  the  picking  starts, 

Into  the  field  the  sunburned  pickers  fare, 

With  ladders,  baskets  and  collecting  carts 

And  tree  by  tree  is  mounted  and  stripped  bare. 

And  in  the  Barn,  the  marketers  prepare : 

The  Barn  whose  builders  ceased  to  work  or  sing 

Ere  Wesley  preached,  or  George  the  Third  was  King. 

All  know  the  English  Barn;  the  simple  nave; 
The  transepts,  with  their  doors ;  the  timbered  roof 
So  lovely  with  the  grace  the  builders  gave, 
Yet  centuries-strong  (and  English-weather-proof) ; 
With  darkness  where  the  great  owls  keep  aloof, 
And  jackdaws  nest,  cats  kitten,  swallows  dive; 
The  harvest  home  that  keeps  mankind  alive. 

i38 


There,  in  the  Barn,  the  white  chip-baskets  spread, 
Rank  upon  rank  with  all  the  various  kinds, 
The  pale,  the  red  and  gold,  the  black  and  red, 
Each  the  bright  fruit  of  many  thinking  minds. 
The  sunlight  gives  the  colour  of  the  rinds 
Lustre,  like  jewels,  till  the  barn-floor  seems 
Treasure  beyond  an  Eastern  Prince's  dreams. 

There  now  the  hungry  cherry-lovers  come, 
To  taste  and  choose,  to  buy  and  bear  away, 
The  motors  hoot,  the  lorry-engines  hum 
Twixt  gate  and  barn  the  well-known  narrow  way, 
And  through  the  dusty,  sweet,  hot  summer  day, 
More  and  more  baskets  come-in  from  the  field 
Where  sunburned  men  secure  the  season's  yield. 

Something  of  summer's  beauty  crowns  the  place; 
Much  of  the  summer  bounty  blesses  there 
All  of  these  cherry-folk  with  quiet  grace, 
Welcome  and  peace,  that  cherry-buyers  share. 
Harvest  brings  Nature's  kindness  everywhere, 
The  sweetness  of  reward  on  Summer's  crest 
That  men  wring  from  the  earth  that  gives  them  rest. 

It  is  great  peace  to  watch  the  quiet  scene 
Of  Nature's  bounty,  won  by  toil  and  skill. 
May  Middle  Farm's  fair  orchards  flourish  green 
And  happy  harvests  many  baskets  fill, 
As  long  as  chicory  on  Hagbourne  Hill 
At  cherry-harvest  opens  blossoms  blue, 
And  reddening  cherries  glisten  in  the  dew. 

139 


IN  PRAISE  OF  NURSES 


Dedicated  to 
Mary  Clifford 
Laura  Franklin 
Helen  McKenna 
Phyllis  Simmonds 
Joanna  Wills 


Man,  in  his  gallant  power,  goes  in  pride, 
Confident,  self-sufficient,  gleaming-eyed, 
Till,  with  its  poison  on  an  unseen  point 
A  sickness  strikes  and  all  his  strengths  disjoint. 
Then,  helpless,  useless,  hideous,  stinking,  mad, 
He  lies  bereft  of  what  he  was  and  had, 
Incapable  of  effort,  limb  and  brain, 
A  living  fog  of  fantasies  of  pain. 

And  yet,  today,  as  ever,  since  man  was, 

Even  mad  Man  a  healing  impulse  has. 

Doctors  there  are,  whose  wisdoms  know  and  check 

The  deadly  tilings  that  bring  the  body's  wreck, 

Who  minish  agony,  relieve  and  heal 

Evils  once  mortal  in  Man's  commonweal. 

All  honour  Doctors ;  let  me  honour  those 

Who  tend  the  patient  when  the  doctor  goes. 

140 


Daily  and  nightly,  little  praised  or  paid, 
Those  ordered,  lovely  spirits  bring  their  aid, 
Cheering  the  tired  when  the  pain  is  grim., 
Restoring  power  to  the  helpless  limb. 

Watching  through  darkness,  driving  away  fear 
When  madness  brings  her  many  spectres  near ; 
Cleansing  the  foul,  and  smiling  through  the  pique 
Of  nerves  unstrung  or  overstrained  or  weak, 
Bringing  to  all  a  knowledge,  hardly  won, 
Of  body's  peace  and  spirit's  unison; 
And  blessing  pillows  with  a  touch  that  brings 
Seme  little  ease  to  all  man's  broken  strings. 

All  that  they  do  is  utter  sacrifice 

Of  all  themselves  and  precious  beyond  price; 

And  what  a  joy,  through  them,  to  re-survey 

That  narrow,  sweet,  now  half-forgotten  way 

Of  selfless  service  as  a  way  to  live 

Based  not  on  what  you  win  but  what  you  give. 

Daily  these  gentle  souls  give  pain  relief: 
Deferring  dying  they  diminish  grief; 
The  one  they  succour  need  not  be  a  friend, 
Only  a  wreck  with  anguish  to  amend. 
Anguishes  such  as  lately  made  me  see 
Such  day-and-night-devotion  given  to  me. 

To  you,  most  beautiful,  devoted  friends, 
My  gratitude  will  go  until  life  ends. 

141 


Never,  while  living,  may  1  fail  to  bless 

The  thought  of  you  about  my  wretchedness. 

I  thank  and  bless  you :  that  I  write  at  all 
Is,  by  itself,  your  work's  memorial. 


142 


THE  HAWTHORNS  AT  THE 
CHANTRY  DOOR 

Outside  the  little  Chantry,  built  of  old, 

In  midmost  greenest  May  the  cuckoo  tolled. 

Beside  the  doorless  door  where  swallows  swept 

Two  hawthorn  trees  a  sleepless  sentry  kept, 

One  red,  one  white,  with  boughs  that  intertwined, 

And  I  was  ware,  that  each  had  human  mind, 
Life,  too,  intense;  the  red  one  spoke  to  me. 

The  Red  Thorn 
We  were  unhappy  lovers,  I  and  she, 
She,  Wife  to  Raimond,  once  this  County's  Lord, 
Margaret,  She,  the  honoured,  the  adored; 
And  I,  the  poet  Guillem,  laurel-wreathed, 
Singer  of  songs,  when  I  was  man  and  breathed. 

Let  no-one  think  that  ours  was  guilty  love. 
Though  each  loved  other  neither  knew  thereof. 
I,  like  the  other  poets  everywhere, 
Praised  what  her  noble  beauty  made  aware, 
Womanhood's  glory,  the  one  star  that  shows 
In  this  blind  nightmare  where  man's  spirit  goes. 

143 


The  White  Thorn 
Raimond,  my  Husband,  both  by  mind  and  birth 
Felt  himself  God-appointed  to  rule  earth. 
Pride  was  his  curse,  the  pride  of  one  who  springs 
From  all  a  thousand  years  of  almost  kings. 

And  lesser  pride,  of  one  who  ever  led, 
In  effort  or  affair  the  certain  head. 
I  knew  I  gathered  glory,  marrying  him, 
But  Satan  as  a  husband  can  be  grim. 

0  terrible  to  bear  the  hourly  curse 
Of  pride  of  birth,  of  intellect,  of  purse, 
All  unrelieved  by  one  least  littlest  grain 
Of  sense  of  others'  hope,  or  joy  or  pain. 

1  came  to  live  in  dread  of  his  success 
Seeing  it  make  him  ever  merciless. 
And  yet,  he  had  a  standard,  and  a  style. 

The  Red  Thorn 
We  have  been  hawthorns  here  a  weary  while. 
The  while  we  lived,  a  much-loved  Feast  remained, 
A  Court  of  Love  at  which  a  Lady  reigned 
For  whom  all  poets  fashioned  songs  in  praise 
And  sang  them  to  her  on  the  singing  days, 
The  one  whom  she  approved,  she  crowned  with  bays. 
Some  thirty  poets  of  the  country  round 
Were  heard  and  judged,  and  I  was  the  one  crowned. 

My  poem,  as  I  said,  praised  Womanhood, 

Not  Margaret's  self;  and  this  all  understood. 

And  Raimond  knew  it  when  his  Wife  crowned  me. 

144 


But  though  no  shadow  of  man's  love  could  be 

In  such  a  song,  I,  making  it,  well  knew 

What  hell  was  that  bright  spirit's  daily  due, 

There  with  that  Satan  of  ancestral  pride 

In  which  all  beauty  withered,  all  hope  died. 

So  that,  in  writing,  pity  had  a  part; 

The  formal  song  had  something  from  my  heart. 

The  White  Thorn 
What  human  heart  gives  life  to  cannot  die. 
None  saw  that  something :  no-one,  only  I .  .  . 
It  came  as  dew  of  healing  and  relief. .  . 
O,  it  was  snowdrop  in  my  winter  grief, 
It  made  my  misery  a  little  thing. 

Mark,  now,  the  end : 

Persaunt,  the  Eastern  King, 
Came,  seeking  wisdom,  through  the  western  realms, 
And  finding,  haply,  fewer  brains  than  helms. 
This  Persaunt,  in  his  progress,  was  now  near 
The  river-frontier  seven  miles  from  here. 
Our  King  resolved  to  bid  him  to  a  feast. 
All  wondered  much  which  soldier,  noble,  priest, 
Provost  or  legist  should  be  honoured  thus 
As  herald  from  our  great  King  glorious, 
To  bid  this  marvellous  Indian  be  his  guest. 
My  Raimond  said,  'My  house  is  ancientest. 
My  birth  the  noblest,  and  my  blood  more  blue 
Than  any  King's:  the  office  is  my  due. 
I  shall  be  sent :  no  other  has  a  chance. 


145 


By  brain,  by  lineage,  by  inheritance, 
I  am  the  only  noble  qualified.' 

He  named  what  Knights  of  his  estate  should  ride, 
In  company  with  him :  he  decked  them  fair 
All  blue  and  white,  with  bannerols  to  bear. 
New  housings  for  the  horses,  gilded  spurs, 
And  scarlet  daglets  to  the  minivers .  . . 
All  this  assuming  that  the  right  was  his. 
He  had  no  shadow  of  a  doubt  of  this. 

Then  publicly,  the  King's  will  was  proclaimed. 
Guillem,  not  Raimond,  was  the  envoy  named. 
Guillem,  not  Raimond,  picked  .  .  .  and  even  worse 
Guillem,  not  Raimond,  was  to  write  the  verse 
For  choristers  to  sing  in  the  guest's  praise. 

There  our  lives'  efforts  ended  in  a  blaze. 
Raimond  collapsed  into  the  pit  of  hell  .  .  . 
Nay,  Raimond  died ;  a  fiend  within  him  fell. 

Consider  .  .  .  there  were  fifty  people  by, 

When  Gareth  told  of  Guillem' s  embassy. 

We  were  at  dinner  .  .  .  Raimond  screamed,  and  leant 

And  bit  his  goblet  till  the  silver  bent, 

Then,  rising,  ordered  Gareth  to  be  still .  .  . 

Then,  glaring  round  for  somebody  to  kill 

Gurgled  and  clutched  his  throat  and  turned  to  me  .  . . 

'Guillem,'  he  said,  'the  bard  who  honoured  thee  . .  . 

Yes,  you  adulterous  hag,  your  paramour, 

Guillem,  your  spotted  cuckoo-bard,  the  pure. 

The  King  loves  him,  like  you.' 

146 


He  struck  me  then 
I'th'  face,  with's  goblet,  before  all  the  men. 
Then  beat  them  from  the  presence,  leaving  me. 

The  Red  Thorn 
Almost  the  instant  that  he  let  her  be  .  . . 
I,  Guillem,  entered  to  her  weeping  there, 
White,  with  blood  trickling  through  disordered  hair 
Outraged  and  mute,  a  marble  of  Despair. 
I  saw  that  she  was  stricken  to  the  soul .  . . 
But  how  to  shew  I  knew,  and  how  console? 
Who  can  endure  to  have  his  sorrow  known? 
In  utter  sorrow  mortals  stand  alone. 
Yet  I  was  bearer  of  such  thrilling  news, 
That  utter  them  I  must :  I  could  not  choose. 
'Lady,'  I  said,  'I  galloped  here  to  say, 
King  Persaunt  of  the  East  is  on  his  way 
To  visit  Raimond  and  yourself  today. 
Knowing  you  both  the  Kingdom's  noblest  born, 
He  brings  the  Order  of  the  Unicorn, 
The  greatest  honour  of  his  Eastern  land  . . . 
Given  to  none  save  by  the  monarch's  hand. 
I  could  not  choose  but  gallop  to  declare 
The  happy  honour,  that  you  might  prepare.' 

But  what  are  happy  tidings  to  Despair? 
I  know  not  if  she  heard  or  understood, 
That  white  death  silent  save  for  drip  of  blood. 
So,  staring  and  aghast,  with  mumbled  word 
(Comfort-politeness)  that  she  never  heard, 
I  stumbled  thence,  for  Raimond  must  be  told. 

147 


I  knew  the  castle  household  from  of  old  .  .  . 
I  met  one  of  his  men,  who  recommended 
I  leave  the  Count  until  his  mood  were  ended. 
I  said,  'I  could  not,  for  the  matter  pressed.' 
He  said,  'Nay,  Master,  leave  it,  you  were  best: 
The  Count  is  no  fit  company  today.' 
'I  bring  him  golden  news  that  camiot  stay.' 
'Nay,  Master,  any  news  may  make  him  worse. 
Sin  runs  his  course  and  Satan  runs  his  curse  .  .  . 
He's  in  the  garden-close;  but,  Master,  leave  .  .  . 
An  hour  of  wait  may  save  a  year  of  grieve.' 
I  said,  'King  Persaunt's  coming  cannot  wait.' 
So,  having  said,  I  passed  the  garden  gate. 


This  was  at  midmost  May-time  much  as  now 
All  scent  in  air,  all  blossom  upon  bough. 
And  there  was  Raimond,  snarling-mad,  apart 
Stabbing  a  book  of  poems  to  the  heart, 
Sneering,  with  clenched  teeth  shewing  in  a  grin, 
And  all  hell-fire  scorching  him  within. 


He  rose  to's  feet  in  silence  seeing  me. 
'Guillem,'  he  said,  'the  man  I  longed  to  see. 
Guillem,  who  called  my  Countess  Queen  of  Spring. 
Guillem,  who  made  me  cuckold,  as  men  sing. 
Guillem,  the  herald  to  the  Indian  King, 
Guillem,  the  chosen  for  the  sacred  song  .  .  . 
Or  so  his  silly  head  thinks ;  thinking  wrong. 
Wrong,  do  you  see?  Wrong  as  this  iron  shows.' 

148 


I  felt  his  cold  knife  in  repeated  blows. 
I  saw  his  dog's  teeth  dimming,  and  grass  growing. 
And  hate,  and  beauty,  blurring  out  of  knowing. 
And  then  a  nothing  clear,  but  something  red 
Playing  like  flames  of  hell  about  my  head  .  .  . 
Then,  something  like  a  bird's  song,  as  it  seemed, 
Now  up,  now  down,  as  in  a  music  dreamed.' 

The  White  Thorn 
Most  fatal  was  that  day  to  all  of  us. 
Ere  the  day  ended,  I  was  ended,  thus. 
In  that  same  sunlight,  at  a  later  hour 
I  walked  the  leads  upon  the  castle  tower  .  .  . 
There  Raimond  came,  with  servants  bringing  wine. 
They  laid  it  down,  and  left  us  at  a  sign : 
Red  wine  it  was,  with  honey,  and  a  glass. 
And  Raimond,  seeming  penitent,  alas, 
As  many  times  before,  that  one-time  lover. 
A  useless  shewing,  for  our  lives  were  over. 

'Now  Margaret,'  he  said  (he  seemed  to  smile) 

'Fury  will  make  men  mad  a  little  while, 

Then  passes .  .  .  and  repentance  is  begun. 

With  grief  for  foul  things  said  and  vile  things  done. 

Such  I  have  done,  and  would  undo,  unsay. 

May  we  forget  our  moment's  hell  today? 

May  we,  in  friendship,  drink  a  loving  cup?' 

I  bowed,  he  poured  the  glass  and  held  it  up 

Then,  with  his  dagger,  dipping  honey,  stirred. 

And  gave  to  me,  deep-bowing,  with  this  word : 

149 


'Drink,  lovely  Margaret,  the  cup  of  peace. 
Forgive  my  madness;  let  this  hatred  cease.' 

I  knew  him  for  most  evil  when  most  suave, 

But,  being  woman,  took  the  cup  he  gave, 

And  drank,  and  thanked,  and  said,  'And  will  you  drink?' 

He  smiled  his  toothy  smile,  'Not  so,  I  think. 

This  stirrer  of  your  dram,  this  little  knife, 

One  hour  ago  drank  deep  your  lover's  life, 

Your  Guillem's  heart;  below,  in  the  green  plot. 

It  has  unloosed  your  pretty  lover's  knot, 

That  was  so  sweet;  this  little  knife  and  I. 

His  was  the  life  your  drink  was  sweetened  by  .  .  . 

You  found  it  pleasant,  eh?  you,  hag  of  hell? 

There,  in  the  bluebells  and  dead  asphodel 

You'll  find  his  body  stretched,  so  marked  by  me 

You  may  not  recognise  him  when  you  see. 

Say  .  .  .  was  it  sweet,  the  loving-cup  you  drank?' 

Then  I: 

'So  sweet,  that,  I  shall  ever  thank 

All  spirits  of  all  love,  that  I  have  known 

My  Guillem's  spirit  to  the  inmost  bone.' 

We  were  upon  the  castle-leads  alone. 

'And  now,'  I  said,  'though  Guillem  never  knew 
That  I  adored  him,  be  it  known  to  you. 
And  know  moreover  how  my  soul  is  thrilled 
That  I  am  dying,  Guillem  being  killed, 
And  pass  in  ecstasy  to  my  eclipse, 
His  life  like  sacrament  upon  my  lips.' 

150 


So,  being  at  the  battlements,  I  leaped 

And  only  knew  of  something  senseless  heaped 

Where  there  were  stones  and  little  toad-flax  flowers. 

King  Persaunt  laid  us  in  this  tomb  of  ours, 
Guillem  and  me,  and  built  the  chapel  here, 
Beautiful  once,  but  ruined  many  a  year ; 
While,  as  for  Raimond,  he  was  prisoned  close, 
For  many  years  enduring  many  woes, 
But  linked  to  us,  still,  by  the  lasting  chain. 

The  Red  Thorn 
But,  Margaret:  see:  rejoice:  he  comes  again. 
The  time  for  setting  free  has  run  its  sands. 
In  happier  forms  and  days  in  wiser  lands 
We  shall  again  endeavour,  and  be  wise, 
And  all  the  joy-bells  ring  in  Paradise. 
Look,  here  is  Raimond  .  .  .  how  the  joy-bells  ring.' 

I  heard  the  thrushes  and  the  blackbirds  sing 
For  the  exceeding  beauty  of  the  Spring, 
And  tiny  hawthorn  blossoms  white  and  red 
Fell  light  as  sins  forgiven  on  my  head. 


151 


QUESTION  AND  ANSWER 

A  Tale  of  Sutton  Walls 

Q.  Green  rampart  grassed,  what  have  you  seen  and 

heard? 

A.  Many  a  mourned  deed  and  regretted  word. 

Q.  What  the  most  mourned,  the  most  regretted  thing? 

A.  Ethelbert's  murder  under  the  great  King. 

Q.  Men  marvel  still  at  that  .  .  .  Why  was  it  done? 

A.  Desire  and  wrath,  two  foemen  of  the  Sun, 
Because  the  great  King's  kin,  Guthlac,  of  old, 
Roved  over  seas  for  women,  wine  and  gold, 
Grew  great  and  rich,  and  as  his  power  failed, 
Altered  his  ways,  repented  and  bewailed; 
Gave  all  he  had  to  build  what  still  abide, 
The  monkish  cells  at  Croyland  where  he  died ; 
Where  his  great  bones,  under  the  altar,  heal 
The  sick  and  sore  who  call  him  as  they  kneel. 
All-healing,  is  Saint  Guthlac  lying  dead. 
But  Croyland  was  a  fief  of  Ethelred, 
Not  in  the  Great  King's  realm;  and  the  Great  King 
Counted  those  bones  a  spirit-saving  thing. 

152 


He  was  of  Guthlac's  stock,  his  kinship  claimed 

Possession  of  such  dust  so  greatly  famed; 

Total  possession,  for  he  planned  to  raise 

Over  that  dust,  a  church  that  should  amaze, 

Stone-wrought  and  carven,  painted,  bright  with  gold, 

Unparalleled  where  man  inhabits  mould, 

Above  which  sweet-chimed  bells  should  call  and  tell 

Angels  and  men  to  join  to  conquer  hell . .  . 

This,  in  his  capital,  unbuilt,  but  planned 

To  crown  his  life  and  glorify  his  land, 

To  bring  from  far  and  near  the  countless  host 

Who  seek  St  Guthlac's  help  for  flesh  or  ghost, 

And  make  his  capital,  St  Guthlac's  Home, 

The  greatest  Christian  seat  in  Christendom. 

But  Ethelred,  the  Eastern  King  denied. 
St  Guthlac  dead  should  stay  where  he  had  died. 
No  King  in  Christendom  would  lightly  yield 
So  great  a  glory,  so  supreme  a  shield. 


Q.         Ethelred  owned  no  thing  of  greater  worth : 

What  King  in  Christendom  held  holier  earth? 

A.  It  seemed  the  keystone  and  the  cornerstone 
Of  all  the  structure  Offa  sought  to  own. 
Offa  throughout  his  life  had  had  the  dream 
Of  making  this  land  One,  himself  supreme, 
With  Guthlac,  King  and  Saint,  glory  and  guard. 
Throughout  his  life  his  struggle  had  been  hard  .  . . 

153 


Think  what  he  had  achieved,  while  his  name  rang 
Like  steel  smiting  on  iron  with  a  clang : — 
His  battle  trumpets  blew  across  these  Walls 
Where  now  the  skylarks  sing  and  corncrake  calls. 
Kent  was  subdued  and  his ;  the  south  and  west, 
His  blood-allies  and  partners  manifest ; 
Northumbria  his,  by  blood  alliance  firm ; 
Even  wild  Wales  in  friendship  for  a  term, 
He  had  achieved  the  Dyke  that  sets  a  bar 
To  all  those  children  of  the  roving  star; 
The  Kings  of  Italy  and  France  would  send 
Legates  and  presents,  proud  to  call  him  friend. 
Could  he  but  woo  King  Ethelred  to  grant 
Saint  Guthlac's  dust,  he  had  slight  other  want. 

He  thought,  'My  girl,  Elfrida,  might  persuade 
That  stubborn  dog,  she  is  a  pretty  maid ; 
Holy,  as  girls  go,  and  as  good  a  brown 
As  the  cock  partridge  calling  on  the  down. 
She  would  persuade  him,  for  she,  too,  desires 
That  holy  dust  to  lay  among  his  sires. 
She  with  the  hoard  of  Roman  gold  I  won 
When  I  killed  Egbert  under  Ashendun, 
She  shall  go  plead  and  if  her  pleading  fail 
Words  are  but  air,  and  iron  may  prevail.' 

He  called  for  Gwinbert,  Counsellor  and  Lord, 
His  double-minded  scoundrel  and  proved  sword. 
'Gwinbert,  escort  Elfrida,  the  Princess, 
To  Ethelred,  the  King  at  Outer  Ness 

154 


I  shall  instruct  her  to  what  price  to  go 
For  this  Saint's  holy  bones  I  covet  so, 
Ethelred's  old,  and  beauty  may  persuade'. 
Gwinbert  prepared  to  take  the  royal  maid, 
Reflecting  inly  that  it  gave  him  chance 
To  give  his  statesman's  schemes  a  furtherance. 
He  had  received  estates,  with  gold  to  boot, 
To  help  Prince  Eglan  in  his  marriage  suit. 

Eglan,  who  planned,  as  Gwinbert  knew  alone, 
To  wed  Elfrida  and  have  Offa's  throne. 
Offa,  all  battle-hoary,  could  not  last, 
His  wisdom  and  his  luck  were  of  the  past, 
With  Offa  dead,  as  dead  he  must  be  soon, 
And  Eglan  King  . .  .  the  harp  would  be  in  tune. 
Ethelred  would  refuse,  as  oft  before, 
Then  Eglan,  wedding  as  a  prop  the  more, 
Would  come  as  balm  on  Offa's  wounded  pride. 
With  luck,  Elfrida  should  be  Eglan' s  bride. 

The  night  before  Elfrida  started  east 

The  holy  well-spring  under  Malvern  ceast; 

Southward,  by  Woolhope,  all  a  hillside  shook; 

Over  the  palace  cawed  a  blood-red  rook. 

The  chantry  out  at  Pits  was  shaken  down ; 

Three  shrouded  corpses  swayed  through  Sutton  Town 

Singing  old  Roman  songs  of  coming  doom. 

And  then  the  rain  fell,  filling  Lugg  and  Froom, 

Till  Leddon  ran  all  red  and  Wye  drowned  more 

Then  ever  her  destruction  drowned  before. 


155 


And  still  the  rain  fell,  fouling  all  the  ways. 
Elfrida' s  eastward  ride  took  many  days : 
Through  mire  and  flood  she  floundered,  ill-bested, 
When  she  reached  Croyland,  Ethelred  was  dead. 

Then  she  must  needs  delay  till  the  dead  King 
Took  his  last  service  at  his  burying, 
And  then  delayed  till  Ethelbert,  his  heir, 
After  his  crowning  could  receive  her  there. 
Elfrida,  Offa's  Daughter,  brown  and  glad 
Looked  then  upon  the  planet's  likeliest  lad, 
A  youth  so  trim  and  true,  so  early-wise, 
Each  saw  the  other's  soul  with  lovers'  eyes, 
Love  that  confounded  errors  and  made  plain 
The  way  of  wisdom,  not  to  change  again. 
There,  the  two  talked  until  the  sun  went  down 
And  the  round  moon  arose  above  the  town. 

There,  still  they  talked,  recovering  from  of  old 
Forgotten  links  of  love  of  utter  gold. 
There  they  re-found  the  hopes  so  panted-for 
And  Gwinbert  listened  from  behind  the  door. 

Gwinbert  took  horse  and  galloped  night  and  day 
West,  ever  west,  resolving  what  to  say. 

'This  school-boy  King  to  have  Elfrida' s  hand? 
Not  while  Sir  Gwinbert  and  King  Offa  stand. 
St  Guthlac's  ashes  in  exchange  for  her? 
Not  while  Sir  Gwinbert  is  the  Minister. 
Eglan  shall  have  Elfrida:  none  but  he.' 

156 


Westward  he  crossed,  where  Severn  seeks  the  sea. 
And  west  through  grass  by  waters  many-milled. 
'This  gay  young  cockerel  shall  be  quickly  killed'. 
He  galloped  shouting,  till  he  reached  the  King. 

'Listen,  Great  Master,  to  this  latest  thing. 
'King  Ethelred  is  dead;  his  son  succeeds. 
A  boy  half  monk,  best  fit  for  telling  beads, 
And  this  boy  wooes  your  Daughter,  the  princess, 
He  rides  to  press  his  suiting,  nothing  less . . . 

He  offers  a  strange  bargain:  so,  prepare  .  . . 
You  give  Elfrida,  making  him  your  heir, 
St  Guthlac's  bones  will  then  be  in  your  realm, 
He  says  "a  younger  hand  best  suits  a  helm". 
My  stars,  these  eastern  children  have  a  nerve  . . . 
A  school-boy,  but  a  month  a  King,  observe. 
'And  if  King  Offa  should  refuse,'  he  says, 
King  Offa  cannot  live  for  many  days .  .  . 
Offa  shall  hear  my  suit  and  give  reply.' 

'By  thundering  God,'  said  Offa,  'He  shall  die. 
Which  road's  he  take?' 

'The  south'. 

'Go  there  and  wait. 
Meet  him :  delay  him :  till  we  close  the  gate. 
Let  not  a  word  of  his  approach  be  known. 
Say  that  the  King  will  welcome  him  alone. 
Come  by  the  postern  door,  and  there  'twere  best 
Say  I  permit  no  weapon  on  a  guest. 

157 


So  take  his  sword,  and  let  him  into  Court, 
Close  the  door  after  him  and  cut  him  short. 
Black  Mul  shall  help:  then  fling  his  bag  of  bones 
There  in  the  bogland  at  the  stepping-stones. 
Then,  you  and  Mul,  to  Chester,  to  my  son 
And  say  what  bride  King  Ethelbert  has  won.' 

So,  when  the  time  arrived,  this  now  green  grass, 
Then  a  walled  city,  felt  the  murder  pass, 
And  the  gate  open  to  let  Gwinbert  go 
Bearing  a  body  to  the  Lugg  below, 
Then  heard,  and  still  remembers,  the  horse  shoes 
Splash  the  Lugg  mud  now  crusht  to  redder  ooze ; 
And  so  away,  past  Clee  and  Wrekin  on, 
To  get  away  from  what  has  never  gone. 

In  the  dark  midnight  while  King  Offa  slept 

Egmund  and  Britford  the  mid  vigil  kept; 

They  heard  a  woman  sobbing  on  the  stair, 

A  light  approached,  who  could  be  moving  there? 

The  hound  at  Britford's  feet,  with  staring  hide, 

Quivered  and  whined  and  cowered  terrified. 

The  wooden  latch  fell  from  the  shaken  door 

A  light  displayed  a  woman  weeping  sore  .  . . 

No  earthly  light,  no  moonlight,  but  the  light 

Of  some  deep  purpose  overcoming  night. 

So  as  the  scared  lads  watched,  the  sobbing  ceast : 

It  was  Elfrida's  spirit  from  the  east . . . 

'She  is  dead/  Britford  whispered,  'and  her  ghost 

Comes  in  farewell  to  all  she  loved  the  most/ 

158 


'Alas,  I  am  not  dead,'  the  shape  replied. 
'My  love  is  dead  with  sword  thrusts  in  his  side. 
'My  love  is  murdered  in  the  boggy  place 
By  raddled  Lugg  with  mud  upon  his  face. 

0  Britford,  Egmund,  help  my  heart's  distress, 

1  learned  too  late  of  Gwinbert's  wickedness, 
But  my  horse  fell ...  I  could  not  be  in  time 
To  quench  my  father's  fury  before  crime  . . . 
But  now,  O  save  his  body,  I  beseech.' 

The  two  lads,  rose,  one  spirit  spoke  in  each. 

The  spirit,  led  into  the  summer  dark  . . . 
No  sentry  called,  no  owl,  nor  did  dogs  bark, 
All  still  the  sleeping  town,  but  the  bright  shape 
Lit  the  still  lane  and  bade  the  gateways  gape. 

Westward  they  went,  till  there,  with  wimpling  tones 
The  summer  Lugg  lapped  at  the  stepping-stones. 
Elfrida  pointed  there  and  led  the  way, 
To  the  tramped  shallows  where  her  lover  lay. 

'O  Ethelbert,'  she  cried,  'I  strove  indeed  .  .  . 
But  this,  as  Wisdom  wills,  has  been  decreed  . .  . 
The  promised  end  shall  shortly  come  to  pass, 
Help  Britford,  Egmund,  to  this  drier  grass.' 

They  drew  the  body  to  the  drier  space, 
They  washed  the  mud  from  her  dead  lover's  face, 
Cleansed  the  dear  hair  and  closed  the  startled  eyes, 
All  life  is  spirit  when  a  lover  dies. 

159 


Elfrida's  spirit  said  'Mad  John,  the  herd, 
Will  bring  an  oxcart  ere  the  cocks  have  stirred. 
Lay  him  upon  the  cart,  Mad  John  will  know 
Ay,  and  the  oxen,  where  he  has  to  go.' 

Even  at  this,  that  guiding  shape  of  light 
Dimmed  into  dawn-dim  of  the  summer  night. 
She  was  not  there  but  from  a  hedge  near-by 
A  blackbird  startled  with  his  waking  cry, 
And  from  an  elm  above,  a  cuckoo  tolled 
His  cheerful  joy  call,  cuckoldy  and  cold. 
Then,  from  the  haystack  of  his  summer  bed, 
Mad  John,  the  herd,  his  cart  and  oxen  led, 
Singing  'You  black-faced  devils ;  Haw  and  Gee, 
Go  yonder,  merry  boys;  then  come  to  me/ 

There  the  two  squires  laid  the  cart  its  load 
And  turned  to  town ;  the  ox-cart  took  the  road. 
Singing,  Mad  John  went,  as  the  blackbird  sings, 
From  some  diviner  sense  of  human  things, 
Until  before  him,  there,  on  bush  and  spray, 
Roses  of  all  sorts  seemed  to  bar  his  way, 
Red,  white  and  yellow,  in  such  scent  and  glow 
As  naught  but  roses  in  such  summers  know, 
Roses  by  this  time  sought  by  myriad  bees 
In  the  hot  sunlight's  honeyed  secrecies. 

Beyond  the  roses,  in  the  green  beyond, 
The  madman  heard  a  tolling  bell  despond 
And  from  the  greenness,  with  a  mourning  hymn 
The  monastery  monks  came  meeting  him ; 

1 60 


There,  too,  the  convent  nuns  whom  all  folk  bless, 
And,  with  the  nuns,  Elfrida  the  Princess. 

There  was  no  need  for  given  orders  then. 
Singing  their  hymn,  the  Abbot  and  his  men 
Came  to  the  ox-cart  censing  what  it  bore, 
Then,  singing  still,  they  turned  towards  the  shore 
Of  Guardian  Wye  whose  blessed  channel  closes 
Black-mountained  Rhondda  from  the  land  of  roses. 

Then,  singing  still,  they  turned  into  the  fold, 
Of  Mary's  minster  church  whose  bell  still  tolled. 
At  the  Church  western  door  the  ox-cart  stayed. 

'O  Martyr,  King  and  Saint,'  the  Bishop  prayed, 
'Be  thou  our  help  in  Quire  where  we  sing.' 

The  white  Elfrida  gave  him  back  his  ring. 
She  vowed  herself  to  be  a  Nun  thenceforth, 
Gwinbert  was  killed  in  quarrel  in  the  North 
And  Offa  died,  and  his  possessions  merged 
In  other  Kingdoms,  as  his  rivals  urged. 
And  Guthlac's  dust  remained  in  Croyland  shrine. 
Ethelbert's  dust  is  with  the  bread  and  wine 
Under  the  altar  near  his  image  still. 
Apples  and  grasses  cover  Sutton  Hill. 


161 


KING  EDWARD  THE  CONFESSOR 
AND  HIS  RING 

Of  all  the  Saints  of  whom  we  sing 
As  crowned  and  into  glory  gone, 
Edward  Confessor,  Saint  and  King, 
Loved  best  the  loved  Apostle  John. 

When  any  Church  was  consecrate 
In  Saint  John's  name,  he  bid  me  bear 
Purses  of  gold  exceeding  great 
And  ride  with  him  to  give  them  there. 

The  wonder  that  I  tell  began 
At  just  such  blessing  of  a  shrine. 
I  marked  an  outland  beggar-man 
Whose  inward  spirit  seemed  divine, 

Who,  when  the  sacring  had  been  done, 
Outside  the  Church,  as  the  bells  rang, 
Stood  silent,  shining  like  the  sun, 
While  the  assembled  quires  sang. 

Then,  coming  to  the  King,  he  cried: 
*0  King  ...  a  penny  for  my  need.' 
'The  purse  is  empty,'  I  replied. 
I  showed  it  bare  in  very  deed. 

162 


No  widow's  copper  mite  was  in't. 
The  Kingly  bounty  would  have  made 
Low  water  in  the  Royal  Mint 
He  gave  as  Kingly  nature  bade. 

'Stay,  Friend,  an  instant/  said  the  King. 
'No  misery  must  ask  in  vain. 
Brother,  accept  this  finger-ring, 
And  may  it  raise  your  state  again/ 

It  was  his  finger-ring,  that  bore 
A  table-emerald,  so  green 
No  May-time  ever  lovelier  wore, 
No  June  had  ever  lovelier  seen. 

Then  the  poor  man  with  tears  of  grace 
Blest  gift  and  giver,  deeply  stirred. 
He  went,  with  light  upon  his  face, 
Singing  thanksgiving  for  God's  Word. 

It  fell,  before  the  daffodil, 
I  went  a  pilgrimage  abroad 
Eastward,  if  such  should  be  God's  will 
To  tread  the  country  of  our  Lord. 

But  I  was  wrecked  midst  foreign  men, 
And  reached  a  city  all  alone 
With  temples  of  the  Saracen 
And  minarets  like  spears  of  stone. 

163 


And  fish-pools  among  orange  groves 
And  sunny  squares  where  fountains  played, 
And  gateways  where  the  camel  droves 
Burdened  with  spices,  snarled  and  swayed. 

And  through  the  street,  procession  came. 
The  country's  King,  white-headed,  crowned, 
Who  saw  me,  called  me,  asked  my  name 
My  faith,  my  home,  and  whither  bound. 

'Friend,'  the  King  said,  'we've  met  before 
Once,  when  you  served  the  English  King 
Outside  the  newly-hallowed  door 
You  saw  him  give  this  emerald  ring. 

I  love  your  King :  I  welcome  you. 
You  shall  pass  homeward  over  sea, 
With  Knights  of  mine  for  retinue, 
And  bear  him  back  this  ring  from  me. 

And  say  that,  six  months  to  the  day 
I  shall  be  there  to  bring  him  home 
Where  never  darkness  nor  decay 
Nor  any  sin  or  sorrow  come. 

And  say  that  I,  who  tell  you  this, 
Well  know  the  praise  he  renders  me. 
I  am  St  John,  the  Evangelist 
Whom  our  Lord  loved  in  Galilee. 

164 


And  I,  who,  in  the  morning  gloom 
Peered  in  upon  the  chamber  bare 
On  linen  folded  in  a  tomb, 
I,  John,  shall  be  beside  him  there/ 

Thus  I  returned :  I  gave  the  Ring 
Back  to  its  giver :  told  the  tale 
Of  what  was  promised  to  the  King 
By  one  whose  promise  cannot  fail. 

And  six  months  to  the  very  day 
Snow-eagles  swept  out  of  the  sky 
Calling  the  holy  King  away 
To  be  with  all  that  cannot  die. 


i65 


THE  BURIED  BRIDE 

or 

TRUE  LOVE  FINDS  A  WAY 

After  the  wedding,  all  returned  to  feast. 
The  Mother  of  the  Bride  talked  with  the  Priest. 
'Yes ...  a  good  match  .  . .  and  Emily  will  soon 
Forget  her  girlish  crying  for  the  moon. 
It  was  but  fancy  that  her  heart  should  go 
To  Hugh,  the  child  she  played  with,  years  ago. 
That  was  absurd,  and  this  she  came  to  see, 
And  Hugh,  of  course,  saw  its  absurdity. 
When  once  a  girl  is  married  she  is  safe; 
And  women  soon  forget  and  cease  to  chafe. 
But  here  is  Lance:  now,  where  is  Emily? 
She  must  have  shed  her  wedding  lacery. 
Run,  Janet,  dear,  and  bid  her  hurry  down, 
Here  is  the  wise  Lord  Provost  of  the  Town. 
Welcome,  Lord  Provost :  yes,  the  sight  was  fair. 
We  are  so  very  glad  that  you  were  there. 
Yes,  you  shall  see  the  Bride :  she  cannot  be 
More  than  a  moment.  Where  is  Emily? 

Janet:  'O  piteous,  piteous;  Emily  is  dead, 

White,  pulseless,  breathless,  lifeless  on  the  bed. 
As  she  foretold  when  I  was  with  her  there, 
Lifting  the  bridal  veilings  from  her  hair, 
She  said,  "Alas  for  my  unhappy  chance; 

166 


Heart-break  to  Hugh  and  misery  to  Lance, 

And  death  to  me,  for  I  will  not  survive 

Leaving  my  Hugh,  the  saddest  soul  alive. 

And  now  I  die,"  and  even  so  she  died, 

In  uttermost  despair,  not  suicide. 

She  would  not,  could  not,  live,  not  having  Hugh/ 

Lance:  *A  pretty  wedding  feast  you  bring  to  me 
But  bring  me  to  her:  let  me  know  the  truth/ 

There  lay  the  maiden  stricken  in  her  youth, 
White  as  her  bridal  flowers  and  as  fair. 
A  silence  shewed  the  guests  were  made  aware. 
They  uttered  formal  grief  and  stole  away. 
And  Lance,  a  widower  on  his  marriage  day, 
Savage  at  what  seemed  trick,  assumed  a  sorrow. 
They  laid  her  in  the  chancel  till  the  morrow, 
Then  in  the  vault  of  Lance's  ancestors 
Buried  her,  scattered  dust,  and  sealed  the  doors. 

In  the  dark  night,  when  all  the  city  slept, 

Hugh,  who  had  loved  her,  to  the  chapel  crept. 

He  broke  the  seals,  hove  back  the  doors  and  glid 

Down  to  the  vault  where  so  much  beauty  hid. 

There,  setting  down  the  light,  he  wrought,  and  raised 

The  plated  plank  on  Emily  and  gazed. 

There  she  lay  lovely  in  her  piteous  peace. 

'O  happy  darling  to  have  found  release, 

Blessed  release,  from  destiny  too  grim. 

O  better  thus  than  ever  slave  to  him, 

To  him  to  whom  your  dowry  far  outweighed 

Your  spirit's  beauty,  dear  dead  lovely  maid. 

167 


Farewell,  beloved  Emily,  but  take 
This  lock  of  hair  for  Hugh  your  lover's  sake. 
You  will  be  near  me  for  what  days  remain 
Before  Death  takes  me  and  we  meet  again. 
Farewell.  Farewell.' 

Then,  leaving  the  light  burning, 
He  left  the  vault,  the  Church,  and  took  the  turning 
Out  of  the  parvise  into  the  dark  nooks 
Where  sometimes  inn-signs  creaked  upon  their  hooks 
And  cats'eyes  gleamed  but  all  the  town  was  dead. 


The  midnight  bells  told  how  the  hours  sped, 
Then,  as  the  chancel  shewed  a  little  light, 
Emily's  spirit  wakened  from  her  night. 
She  stirred,  she  roused,  she  saw  the  funeral  scene, 
Coffins  and  quartered  shields  of  what  had  been. 
She  knew  'I  have  been  buried:  but  they  doubt . . .' 
Conquering  fear,  she  rose  and  tottered  out 
Into  the  Church,  and  thence  back  to  her  home. 
There  her  devoted  Janet  saw  her  come 
And  called  her  Mother,  others  ran  for  Lance, 
And  all  the  town  knew  her  deliverance  . . . 


But  while  some  joyed,  Lance,  in  much  fury,  said 
'She's  dead  and  buried:  and  her  dowry's  paid. 
This  is  her  wraith,  not  she,  or  sprig  of  hell 
Dressed,  for  man's  damning,  in  her  body's  shell. 
I'll  none  of  such  damnation:  gather  faggot 
Quick,  ere  she  wrecks  us,  Bishop:  burn  the  haggot.' 

168 


So  might  it  have  been  done,  for  people  then 
Believed  that  devils  took  the  forms  of  men 
And  many  swore  'This  thing  in  woman's  shape 
Is  Satan's  sending,  let  her  not  escape. 
Burn  her  to  ashes,  brothers:  she's  a  witch.' 

So,  swift,  they  came  with  faggots,  fire,  pitch 
Powder,  and  chains,  and  in  the  market-square 
Drove  in  a  stake  and  laid  the  pyre  fair, 
Then,  yelling,  led  by  Lance,  they  ran  to  fetch 
Their  victim  from  her  home  to  burn  the  wretch. 
But  now  the  Provost  and  his  men  appeared. 
'Back,  you,'  he  cried,  'and  let  the  place  be  cleared. 
Back;  all  of  you;  upon  your  peril;  back.' 

But  hot  blood  has  the  pleasure  of  attack, 

And  hate  its  minute's  joy  at  any  cost. 

So,  here,  the  riot  disobeyed  and  lost. 

And  in  the  mellay,  Lance,  flung  from  his  horse 

And  dragged  by  stirrup  was  a  trampled  corse 

Kicked  out  of  semblance  when  they  cut  the  thong. 

So  Destiny  and  death  annulled  the  wrong 
Wrought  by  the  plotting  mind  to  gather  gain. 
Emily's  shroud  and  coffin  served  again 
That  very  night,  for  Lance,  and  there  he  lies. 
His  spirit  wanders  somewhere  growing  wise, 
Or  so  I  hope,  before  another  chance. 
And  Emily,  forever  quit  of  Lance, 
Gave  her  dead  lord's  possessions  as  seemed  due. 

Then  in  most  happy  time  she  married  Hugh. 

169 


JOHN  GRIMALDI 

or 

THE  SAILOR'S  RETURN 

Not  all  forgotten  yet  in  London  Town 

Is  Joe  Grimaldi,  once  the  famous  Clown. 

Though  vanished  from  the  Stage  these  many  moons 

Men  know  what  songs  he  sang,  if  not  the  tunes. 

Some  hint  or  shadow  of  his  figure  lingers 

In  ancient  prints  of  pits  and  clowns  and  singers. 

And  many  know  he  played  the  tragic  part 

Of  making  merry  with  a  broken  heart. 

Who  was  this  darling  of  that  distant  age? 
An  actor's  son,  born  almost  on  the  stage. 
Theatre-drawn  with  every  breath  he  drew. 
(He  played  a  monkey's  part  ere  he  was  two) 
He,  and  his  younger  brother  John,  were  both 
Theatre-doomed,  Joe  willingly,  John  loth. 
Birth-doomed,  to  drag  through  childhood's  bitter  days 
On  scanty  bread  from  tiny  parts  in  plays, 
Joe,  glad,  however  bitter  it  might  be, 
John,  loathing  all,  and  longing  for  the  sea. 

John,  being  seven,  brighter  hopes  began ; 
A  berth  was  found  him  in  an  Indiaman, 
His  kit  was  given  and  aboard  he  went, 
Bound  for  the  Spice  Isles  of  the  Orient 

170 


Or  so  he  hoped,  but  found  a  long  delay 

Of  toil  in  port  ere  getting  under  way. 

Toil  all  unwelcome  to  a  tiny  boy 

Expecting  liberty  and  sailor's  joy 

And  finding  thraldom  and  unwelcome  cheer 

Salt,  dark  and  dirty  in  a  cable-tier 

With  none  to  teach  him,  save  by  kick  and  blow, 

The  unknown  art  he  was  supposed  to  know. 

There,  as  he  sorrowed,  sailor-sick  and  sad, 
Another  prospect  opened  to  the  lad. 
A  near-by  frigate  had  command  to  sail 
Next  day  at  dawn  should  wind  and  tide  avail. 
Surely,  in  her,  he  would  at  once  achieve 
The  grand,  free  life  of  men  who  cannot  grieve, 
Who  sail  upon  white  wings  as  Neptune's  sons 
Annihilating  England's  foes  with  guns; 

Then,  rich  with  prize,  return  in  glory,  singing, 
Setting  the  Minster  bells  of  England  ringing  . . . 
Surely,  in  her  .  . . 

Thus  little  boys  of  seven 
Dream  of  the  life  at  sea  as  life  in  Heaven. 
So,  in  the  dusk,  this  little  John,  stripped  bare 
And  left  his  Indiaman  at  anchor  there, 
And  swam,  all  naked,  to  the  frigate's  side, 
To  volunteer  where  no-one  was  denied. 
But  to  what  tests  they  put  him,  and  what  rank 
He  climbed  to  in  that  peril  of  sea-plank, 
Is  all  unknown,  his  person  disappears, 
No  word  of  him  is  heard  for  fourteen  years. 

171 


Meanwhile  his  brother  Joe,  by  slow  degrees 
Learned  upon  jealous  stages  how  to  please, 
Learned  all  the  craft,  and  met  with  John  again, 
While  playing  comedy  in  Drury  Lane. 
While  in  the  wings  and  waiting  for  his  cue 
A  man  said  'Joe,  some  people  ask  for  you. 
Two  men:  they  wait  below,  till  you  are  free.' 

Thither  Joe  went;  gay  sprigs  they  seemed  to  be, 
Elegant  youths,  and  strangers  both,  he  thought. 
But  one  most  pressingly  his  notice  caught, 
Showing  a  tiny  scar  upon  his  chest, 
It  was  John's  self,  his  brother  manifest, 
Returned,  and  rich,  for  as  he  made  avow 
'I  have  six  hundred  pounds  upon  me  now.' 
'John  there  is  danger  laying  such  facts  bare.' 
'Sailors  despise  all  danger  everywhere.' 
'In  town,  they  should  not;  but,  I  must  not  stay. 
Come  to  the  Green  Room  till  we  end  the  play. 
Wroughton  is  there,  who  fitted  you  for  sea.' 

Then  John's  companion  uttered  hastily, 
'I'll  call  for  you  tomorrow,  John,  at  ten.' 
This  John  confirmed,  the  friend  departed  then. 
It  was  remembered  later,  none  had  heard 
Aught  of  this  friend,  no  name,  nor  other  word, 
Nor  noticed  him,  save  that,  like  John,  he  bore 
Gear  ready-made,  as  one  just  come  ashore. 
Blue  coat,  white  waistcoat,  and  a  gold-topped  cane, 
Thus  geared,  he  left  and  never  came  again. 

172 


Within  the  Green  Room,  John  made  many  friends, 

Joe  came  and  went  at  scene  and  curtain  ends ; 

But  when  the  play  was  over  Joe  was  free. 

'John,  when  I've  changed,  you  must  come  home  with  me.' 

And  here  he  told  of  Mother,  Wife  and  home, 

And  what  a  joy  it  was  that  John  had  come, 

To  share  their  life :  and  asked,  How  long  ago 

John  had  reached  town. 

'Two  hours'  time,  or  so  .  . . 
Time  just  to  dine  and  come  to  Drury  Lane.' 
'When  I  have  changed  I'll  take  you  home  again.' 
And  here  he  named  the  number  and  the  street. 
Now  I  will  change:  wait  here  until  we  meet.' 

Leaving  John  there,  Joe  hurried  off  to  change. 
But  John's  arrival  had  made  all  seem  strange, 
All  marvellous,  miraculous,  undreamed  .  .  . 
Changing  his  clothes  took  longer  than  he  deemed. 
But  having  dressed,  an  actor  hailed  him  thus : 
'Ah,  Joe,  what  fun  for  you  and  all  of  us .  .  . 
Your  brother's  on  the  stage,  that  lively  blade  .  .  . 
He  says  you've  been  much  longer  than  you  said.' 

John  was  not  on  the  stage;  a  man  said,  'No  . . . 
I  saw  him  here  not  twenty  ticks  ago  .  .  . 
He  went  towards  the  stage-door,  down  the  stair.' 
Joe  hurried  thither,  but  John  was  not  there. 
'Went  out  a  minute  since,'  the  porter  cried, 
'No,  not  so  much:  he  must  be  just  outside  . .  .' 
But  no  John  showed  in  the  dim  lamp-lit  lane, 
No  John  at  all  was  there,  so  much  was  plain. 

173 


'Of  course,' Joe  cried,  'there  where  the  windows  glow 
The  Bowlbys  live:  he  knew  them  long  ago. 
Young  Bowlby  was  his  friend:  he's  calling  there.' 
Thither  they  went,  but  found  the  covert  bare. 
'Yes.  John  was  here  not  half  a  minute  past !' 
Old  Bowlby  said,  'That's  where  I  saw  him  last 
Going  to  Duke  Street,  just  beyond  the  bend.' 
'Baily's,'  said  Joe,  'Our  landlord,  then,  and  friend. 
He's  gone  to  Baily's.  On,  to  Baily's  all. 

Blank  windows  watched  the  night  from  Baily's  wall . . 
Joe  knocked  and  rang :  but  nobody  replied. 
At  last  an  upper  window  opened  wide. 
A  maid  put  head  out  'As  I  said  before  .  .  . 
He's  not  at  home  .  .  .  stop  knocking  at  the  door.' 
'Who's  not  at  home?' 

'Why,  Mr  Baily,  sir.' 

Within  the  darkened  house,  there  came  a  stir, 

A  light,  the  maid  descended,  and  unchained. 

'A  man  came  knocking  here,  Sir,'  she  explained 

Rousing  the  street,  Sir,  not  a  minute  past. 

Our  Mr  Baily  left  here  Friday  last .  .  . 

Going  to  Hungerford,  out  Berkshire  way  . .  . 

I  told  the  man,  Sir,  and  he  went  away. 

And  when  you  knocked,  I  thought  he'd  come  again. 

From  up  above  I  could  not  see  liim  plain. 

Only  his  waistcoat  white 

'Well ...  it  was  John. 
He  came  to  look-up  Baily  and  has  gone  .  .  . 
Gone  to  the  theatre,  no  doubt,  for  me. 

174 


Back  to  the  theatre,  then,  hurriedly.' 
Joe  thanked  the  girl,  and  hurriedly  returned. 

The  theatre  was  shut,  though  light  still  burned, 
Men,  closing-down,  unbolted  to  the  knock. 
No-one  had  entered  since  they  turned  the  lock, 
John  was  not  there,  had  never  come  again. 
'He  has  gone  home  to  Mother,  it  is  plain.' 
Joe  said,  'I  told  him  the  address;  he's  there.' 
So,  swiftly,  by  still  street  and  empty  square, 
By  cats  and  watchman's  braziers,  and  odd  light, 
Late  cart  or  passer,  of  a  town  at  night, 
He  hurried  home,  and  knocked,  and  was  let  in. 

Strangeness  had  shewn;  now  tragedies  begin. 
Joe  found  his  Mother  pale,  and  asked  in  doubt, 
'Has  anybody  called,  since  I  went  out?' 
'No-one  .  .  .  Who  should  have  called?' 

'Your  son,  John,  home.' 
The  Mother  swooned ;  alas,  no  John  had  come, 
And  though  she  hoped  the  night  through,  did  not  come. 

But  John's  companion  (Joe  remembered,  then) 

Had  clearly  said  'I'll  call  for  you  at  ten.' 

So,  before  ten,  Joe  was  on  watch  again 

In  and  about  the  doors  of  Drury  Lane 

But  neither  John  nor  friend  th'  appointment  kept. 

Joe  and  his  Mother  waited,  watched  and  wept. 
Asked,  sought,  entreated,  but  they  never  heard 
Of  brother  John  again  one  helpful  word. 

175 


No  littlest  trace  of  him  was  ever  found. 
By  many  means  Death  brings  us  to  the  ground, 
But  where  or  by  what  means  Joe's  brother  died 
None  came  to  know,  though  many  seekers  tried. 
The  tiny  glimpse  of  one  who  knocked  by  night 
Caught  by  the  maid,  the  half-seen  glimpse  of  white, 
Remained  the  last  glimpse  seen  of  brother  John. 
From  darkness  come  and  into  darkness  gone. 

Some  thought  a  press-gang  hurried  him  aboard 
A  ship  at  point  to  sail  to  death  abroad. 
Some,  that  a  tempter  lured  him  into  hold 
Near  Drury  Lane,  and  killed  him  for  his  gold. 
Some,  that  the  unknown  friend  had  plotted  this. 
Cities  and  Night  hide  many  mysteries. 

Some  have  imagined  that  he  came  to  knock 
His  Mother's  door  and  begged  her  to  unlock. 
Calling  himself 'Your  John,  returned  from  sea'  . . . 
That  she  refused,  a  lone,  weak  woman  she  . . . 
There,  in  an  unlit  suburb,  late  at  night .  . . 
That,  then,  at  her  refusal,  in  despite, 
He  had  abandoned  every  thought  of  home, 
And  turned  to  that  unknown  whence  he  had  come. 

Some  ask,  if  that  that  Drury  Lane  perceived 

Were,  truly,  living  man,  as  men  believed, 

Not  ghost  or  phantom  of  John  newly  dead 

Fulfilling  hope  long  unaccomplished, 

Through  thwarting  Death  upon  fulfilment's  brink? 

Longing  for  home  is  stronger  than  men  think 

176 


And  after  fourteen  years  of  sea,  at  war, 
Starved  of  all  tenderness  men  hunger  for, 
The  longing  may  have  focused  to  such  flame 
That  it  out-struggled  Death  and  overcame 
Allowing  the  loosed  soul  to  have  her  will. 

So  some  have  wondered,  as  they  wonder  still. 

The  answer  to  the  problem  no  man  knows. 

The  hearts  that  ached  have  finished  now  with  woes. 


177 


A  WORD  WITH  SIR  FRANCIS  DRAKE 

DURING  HIS 

LAST  NIGHT  IN  LONDON 


1595 


Scene:  A  room  at  night.  Sir  Francis  Drake  writing.  One 
knocks. 

Drake:  Come  in.  (Tirrold  enters.) 

What  now? 

Tirrold:  You  won't  remember  me, 

But,  Sir,  I  had  to  see  you  .  .  . 

Drake:  Let  me  see... 

You  were  aboard  . .  .  not  Christopher  .  .  .  Wait  yet. 
Frank,  then,  Frank  Tirrold,  if  I  don't  forget. 
Weren't  you  my  fiddler  in  the  Golden  Hind? 

Tirrold:  O  Sir...  that  you  should  keep  me  still  in  mind. 

Drake:  I  don't  forget  old  shipmates.  Come,  sit  down. 
Sit,  man:  what  brings  you  into  London  Town? 
Prosperity,  it  seems:  do  you  still  play? 

Tirrold:  Yes,  and  make  others  sing,  this  many  a  day. 
I'm  music-master  in  the  play-house  there. 

178 


Drake:  We  were  great  fellows  in  the  days  that  were. 
A  score,  perhaps,  still  living,  sprinkled  round, 
Somehow  un-hanged,  and  somehow  never  drowned. 
Shall  we  away,  and  round  the  world  agen? 

Tirrold:  Sir,  you  have  done  enough  for  twenty  men. 
For  me,  once  round  will  serve  for  twenty  lives. 
While  dry  land  stands  and  offers  gaols  and  gyves. 
And  prison-chains  and  iron  bars  and  locks, 
I'll  have  no  more  of  running  upon  rocks, 
Eight  thousand  miles  from  home :  once  serves  for  me. 

Drake:  To  each,  his  lot:  my  Fortune  is  the  sea. 
We  were  near  death  that  day  upon  the  reef. 

Tirrold:  We'd  have  met  death  there  with  a  lesser  chief. 
And  many  other  days,  too,  west  and  east. 
Glory  is  like  a  coronation  feast 
It  suits  the  ruler,  not  the  foremast  hand. 

Sir  .  .  .  one  small  thing  I  cannot  understand  . .  . 

The  book  there  is,  describing  what  betid 

The  wide  world  round,  the  wonders  that  you  did, 

It  tells  of  snowfall  in  that  western  bay 

Where  we  careened  ere  going  west  away. 

The  white-cliffed  harbour  that  you  made  us  call 

New  Albion  ...  we  had  no  snow  at  all. 

Drake:  None,  Frank,  the  stories  of  the  snow  are  lies, 
Or  facts  misplaced  or  truths  in  some  disguise, 
Just  facts  and  truths  divulged  with  altered  dates 
From  my  account  of  the  Magellan  Straits. 

179 


Lies  to  deceive  the  Spaniards  and  to  scare 
All  greedy  dons  from  trying  settling  there. 
They  like  the  sun. 

Tirrold:  But,  Sir,  no  falsehood  told 

Will  frighten  any  man  from  seeking  gold. 
Then;  they  have  captured  some  of  us  and  learned 
The  truth,  by  torture,  ere  they  hanged  or  burned. 


Drake:  The  falsehood  served,  they  never  took  the  land  . . . 
That  unsailed  sea  still  beats  upon  its  sand. 
Nor  have  we  taken  it,  this  weary  while. 
Yet,  standing  there,  so  many  a  thousand  mile 
From  England,  thinking  what  a  land  we  held, 
I  tell  you,  Master  Tirrold,  my  heart  swelled. 

You  saw  it,  too,  the  miracles  that  lay 
Twelve  hundred  miles  from  Acapulco  Bay  .  . . 
A  port  beyond  all  praise  for  every  good 
Shelter,  careenage,  safety,  water,  food. 
Think  of  those  herds  of  deer;  recall  to  mind 
The  plains  free-warrened  with  the  coney  kind, 
The  fruits  on  tree  and  bush,  the  myriad  fish, 
In  sea  or  brook,  each  one  a  royal  dish. 
Seals  on  the  rocks,  or  roaring,  in  seas  breaking, 
The  trees,  those  miracles,  that  set  us  aching 
To  build  great  ships  from  such  eternal  wood. 
Then  both  the  climate  and  the  soil  so  good, 
That  wild  grapes  grew,  so  excellent  they  were. 

1 80 


Tirrold,  I  longed  to  have  the  English  there. 
Man  .  .  .  we  had  proved  that  there  must  ever  be 
A  South- West  Passage  to  the  Southern  Sea  .  .  . 
The  Spaniards  never  guessed  it  but  we  found  it. 
That  great  America  has  water  round  it. 

Tirrold:  Fierce  water,  too;  and  wind:  a  two  months  trip, 
With  danger  every  day  to  man  and  ship. 

Drake:  All  seas  are  danger,  but  it  stands  to  reason 
Since  all  known  waters  have  a  summer  season, 
In  some  such  season,  once  in  every  year, 
All  ships  could  stand  the  buffet  and  pass  clear. 
Five  hundred  men,  as  strong  as  we,  could  seize 
That  whole  West  Coast,  as  we  did,  and  with  ease, 
And  smash  King  Philip's  empire  into  dust. 

Then,  based  upon  that  harbour  with  our  ships 
They'd  put  his  eastern  empire  in  eclipse. 

Tirrold:  You  mean,  that  we  might  settle  there  .  .  .  and 
stay? 

Drake:  I  hoped  so,  Tirrold,  on  that  distant  day. 

I  hoped  that  England's  Queen  might  see  it  so  . .  . 

Tirrold:  Sir,  we  were  young  men  with  you,  yet  you  know 
Whether  we  loved  that  hell  at  the  world's  ends, 
Twelve  thousand  salt-sea  miles  from  home  and  friends. 
We  just  endured  it,  but  no  tongue  can  say 
Our  agonies  of  hope  to  get  away. 

181 


Only  devotion  to  you  and  the  thought 
Of  home  at  last,  preserved  us  as  we  wrought. 
We  were  scarce  sane;  but  what  would  settlers  be? 
Then,  Sir,  the  Indians,  how  could  they  agree? 
No  western  Indian  loves  to  share  his  land. 
The  white  men  take  it  with  the  iron  hand  .  .  . 
And,  Sir,  those  Indians  were  no  common  foes. 
No  two  of  us  could  wrestle  one  of  those. 

Drake:  They  were  our  friends:  they  mourned  us  when  we 
sailed. 
It  was  my  hope  for  England,  but  it  failed. 
It  is  this  changeful  England's  tidal  air, 
It  quenched  the  light  that  shone  so  starry  there. 
We  long  for  Spain's  destruction;  yet  endure 
All  things  from  Spain,  and  never  seek  the  cure. 

By  Fortune  and  her  Star,  I  tell  you  plain, 
Fortune  and  I  could  thrice  have  ruined  Spain; 
Crumpled  her  up,  like  some  false  letter  read, 
And  flung  her  to  her  place  among  the  dead. 
Fortune  and  I  together  would  have  done 
Matters  not  often  seen  beneath  the  sun. 

First,  at  St  Johns,  where  I'd  have  held  my  ground, 
Trusting  no  Spaniard,  even  if  they  drowned. 
We  were  at  war  there,  we  could  no  more  trust 
The  Spaniards  there  than  angry  asps  in  dust. 
John  feared  to  sink  their  fleet,  yet  all  the  same 
What  else  did  John  do  when  the  Armada  came? 

182 


We  had  to  sink  it  some  time ;  why  not  then, 

Saving  those  hundreds  of  our  countrymen 

Then  murdered  by  the  dogs  whom  we  had  spared? 

That  was  the  first  great  chance,  had  Hawkins  dared. 

Then,  the  next  chance,  a  bullet  struck  me  down 
Just  as  I  won  their  famous  treasure-town, 
And  had  within  my  hand  all  Spain's  estate, 
Silver  and  gold  in  bars,  eight  thousand  weight. 

Then,  at  New  Albion,  what  a  way  was  showed, 
But  asses  ever  choose  the  thistly  road, 
And  so  the  Armada  came  .  .  . 

What  drove  it  hence? 
Fortune  our  friend:  not  gunpowder  and  sense. 

And  now  tomorrow  I  am  off  again 

For  yet  another  piece-meal  thrust  at  Spain. 

But  this  time,  after  twenty  years  of  me, 

Spain  may  have  learned  more  common  sense  than  we ; 

Spain,  not  myself,  may  spring  surprises  now. 

God's  way  is  wondrous  and  to  That  I  bow. 

The  die  is  cast;  tomorrow  I'll  be  gone. 

Tirrold:  To  do  new  deeds  for  men  to  wonder  on. 

Drake:  Youth  does  the  wonders:  yet  I  hope  to  try. 
Now,  Frank,  farewell :  good  Fortune  and  goodbye. 

183 


Tirrold:  To  you,  all  Fortune.  I  beseech  the  Lord 
To  bring  you  home,  with  Spanish  gold  aboard. 

But  one  thing,  Sir,  those  Indians  in  the  Bay 
The  red  New  Albion  Indians  west  away  .  . . 

Good  Master  Chaplain  said  that  he  had  learned 
That  they  believed  we  were  their  dead  returned. 
I  find  no  Scripture  text  to  warrant  this . . . 
But  can  it  be  that  such  a  land  there  is? 
A  land,  far  west,  where  the  beloved  dead 
Live,  plying  other  tasks  for  other  bread  .  .  . 
To  whom  we  might  give  thanks  or  make  amends. 
Our  Mothers,  or  our  lovers,  or  our  friends? 

Drake:  No  mortal  knows  God's  ends,  nor  the  world's  ends. 
Good  Master  Chaplain  (as  you  call  him)  might 
Have  shed  you  some  such  darkness  from  his  night : 
I  cannot :  being  a  sailor,  in  command. 

But  this  I'll  say  ...  If  I  could  understand 

That  such  a  country  lies  in  any  sea 

And  what  its  bearing  is,  and  its  degree, 

I  would  set  forth,  and  find,  and  search  it  through, 

For  just  two  men,  or  either  of  the  two, 

Enriquez,  once  the  Viceroy  at  St  Johns, 

And  Admiral  Luxan,  liars  both  and  dons. 

Could  I  find  both,  my  sword  against  the  pair, 
I'd  fight  the  two,  and  beat,  and  hang  them  there, 
On  one  good  rope  on  which  I  might  depend. 

184 


The  death  I  dealt  would  be  their  utter  end. 
They'd  live  no  longer  in  their  happy  isle. 

And  after  that,  why,  Death  would  be  worth  while. 

But  no  such  Fortune  has  been,  nor  will  be. 
Spain's  still  the  rock  and  I  the  assaulting  sea. 
Again,  all  happy  fortune  and  good  cheer. 
If  I  return  with  Fortune  you  shall  hear. 


185 


LINES 

ON  THE  SHIPWRECK  OF 

ADMIRAL  SIR  CLOUDESLEY  SHOVELL, 

IN 
OCTOBER,   1707, 
ON  THE  ROCKS  SOMETIMES  CALLED 
'THE  BISHOP  AND  HIS  CLERKS' 

Fog  covered  all  the  great  Fleet  homeward  bound, 
No  sights  for  days,  all  groping  up  by  sound, 
And,  finding  Soundings,  all  were  well  aware 
How  thick  with  hidden  Death  those  waters  were. 

So,  in  no  gleam  of  any  light,  they  lay 
With  topsails  furled,  that  grim  October  day, 
With  senses  strained  to  learn  what  lay  ahead 
But  nothing  bringing  knowledge  save  the  lead, 
And  thus,  unsurely,  slowly  brought  to  hand 
Could  but  repeat,  that  they  were  nearing  land. 

There  the  divisions  of  the  power  heaved, 
In  the  seas'  menace,  while  the  tackles  grieved, 
The  timbers  cried  their  culminating  creak, 
And  great  drops  dripped  on  men  afraid  to  speak, 
The  while  they  listened,  bell  by  weary  bell, 
For  sight  or  sound  of  something  that  would  tell. 
But  no  sign  came,  save  ship-sign  dim  or  clear 
From  ship  on  ship,  all  threatened  and  all  near. 

186 


Where  were  they,  then?  All  wondered,  but  none  knew 

What  Death  lay  hidden,  nor  how  near  it  drew, 

But  all  the  squadron's  masters  knew  at  least 

A  seaman's  graveyard  lay  to  north  and  east 

Too  near  for  quiet  and  too  grim  to  chance, 

The  Scilly  Isles,  those  rocks  of  old  romance. 

And  yet,  no  sound  of  breakers  could  be  heard 

Where  Death  on  sentry  challenged  for  the  Word. 

No  strike  of  clock,  or  church-bell  from  the  shore, 

Just  fog,  astern,  alongside,  and  afore. 

And  sometimes  timing-cries,  as  seamen  hauled 

Or  boatswains'  pipes,  or  hails,  or  orders  called. 

Such  dangers  as  they  knew  that  autumn  day 
Came  from  themselves,  slow-heaving,  without  way. 
For  sometimes,  with  wild  cries  and  lantern-flash, 
Ships  would  heave  near  to  some  expected  crash, 
And  crews  make  tumult,  bells  and  drums  and  guns, 
Blinding  the  comers'  eyes  with  malisons, 
Till,  dripping  in  slow  heave,  with  creak  of  strain, 
The  threat  withdrew  into  the  fog  again. 

So  the  day  passed,  until  a  livelier  breath 
Lifted  the  darkness  of  that  fog  of  death, 
And  there,  ahead,  afar,  a  welcome  sight, 
Seen,  recognised  by  all,  St  Agnes'  Light.  . . 
Surety  at  last :  the  Flag,  by  guns  and  hail 
Bade  the  Fleet  eastward  under  easy  sail. 

So,  with  a  creaking  of  great  gear,  they  turned 
And  fog  recovered  where  the  light  had  burned, 


187 


N 


But  it  had  beaconed  that  the  course  was  clear, 
So  mainsails  filled  and  hearts  abandoned  fear. 
But  forty  miles,  by  midnight  at  the  most, 
And  then,  Land's  End,  and  then,  the  Cornish  Coast, 
The  Lizard  before  dawn,  and  then,  ahead, 
The  distant  Start,  the  Devon  ploughland  red. 
Men  of  the  forenoon  watch  could  surely  say 
'We'll  sight  the  Rame  Head  before  close  of  day.' 
And  some,  more  bold,  would  be  by  wager  bound 
The  fleet  would  pass  next  night  in  Plymouth  Sound, 
Land-locked,  at  ease,  in  station,  snugly  moored, 
The  sails  furled,  the  yards  squared,  the  guns  secured. 
And  boats  alongside  peddling  fruit  and  bread. 
And  church  chimes  telling  how  the  hours  sped. 

Thus,  in  the  night,  those  users  of  the  sea 
Talked  in  their  prison  of  their  being  free, 
Knowing,  the  while,  that  every  lift  and  'scend 
Brought  them  a  ship's  length  nearer  to  Land's  End. 
Not  knowing  then  that  unseen  currents  streamed 
Setting  them  ever  north  of  where  they  deemed. 
A  seaman's  graveyard  hedges  England's  shores, 
And  Fortune  rules,  and  Death  has  many  doors. 

All  the  great  fleet  the  starless  midnight  strode, 
Crushing  the  blackness  into  gleams  that  glowed, 
Seeing  at  whiles  (when  aught  they  might  discern) 
A  space  ahead,  the  Admiral's  lanterns  burn 
Where  like  sea-monsters  gleaming  at  the  gorge, 
The  Association  led,  with  the  St  George. 

188 


Who  shall  be  sure  what  wind  they  had,  what  speed, 
What  sight  or  sound  of  warning  to  take  heed, 
What  flash  or  roar  of  breakers,  or  intense 
Shocking  fierce  pang  of  danger  touching  sense? 

Suddenly,  dead  ahead,  the  seamen  saw 

Rocks  among  billows  in  a  hell  of  awe, 

No  time  for  backing  yards  or  changing  helm, 

Time  but  to  signal  lest  the  fleet  o'erwhelm, 

So  lights,  flares,  guns,  despite  the  terror,  blazed. 

The  Association  struck,  the  St  George  grazed, 

Three  minutes  made  the  flagship  broken  plank, 

Within  four  minutes  of  the  crash  she  sank. 

The  men  in  the  St  George,  themselves  swept  clear, 

Saw  suddenly  her  lanterns  disappear. 

The  Eagle  and  the  Romney,  following  close 

Struck,  staved,  and  sundered  whence  they  never  rose. 

The  Firebrand  went  down,  and  but  one  man 

Of  these  lost  ships  was  saved:  the  Royal  Anne 

Struck  and  broke  clear,  her  quarter  railings  gone. 

The  Phoenix  struck,  with  loss,  but  floated  on. 

Thus  in  five  minutes  of  blind  death  and  scare 
Two  thousand  seamen  ceased  to  breathe  the  air 
And  drifted  for  the  gulls  or  sank  below 
To  unlit  silence  where  the  congers  go. 
A  quarter  of  the  fleet  gone,  but  the  rest 

Saved  as  Fate  willed  by  being  further  west 
Or  by  the  lucky  cannon  that  gave  guide 
Through  the  last  conscious  act  of  those  who  died, 


189 


N* 


Men  in  the  Flagship,  who  from  top  or  deck 
Fired  at  once  to  save  the  Fleet  from  wreck, 
And  then,  an  instant  later,  felt  the  ship 
Collapsing,  fling  salt  death  upon  their  lip, 
And  one  wild  instant's  terror  bringing  peace. 

One  seaman  only  did  the  sea  release 
From  sudden  death  when  the  two  thousand  drowned. 
Three  days  thereafter  he  was  seen  and  found 
Alive,  upon  Hellweather  Rock,  and  saved. 

Thus,  the  returning  battleships  were  staved 
Upon  the  Bishops  and  the  Gilstones  grim 
Where  now  the  seaman's  beacons  welcome  him, 
The  first  light  seen,  the  last  light  dropped  astern 
In  hopeful  sailing  or  in  glad  return. 


190 


H.M.S.  CALLIOPE 

IN  THE  HURRICANE, 

IN  APIA  BAY,  SAMOA, 

MARCH  i6th  1889 

Into  full  hurricane  the  wind  increased 

Blasting  the  warships  in  Apia  Bay. 

Aboard  the  ship  Calliope  men  deemed 

Their  anchors  dragged:  they  longed  for  coming  day. 

In  rain  and  flying  spume  the  norther  screamed, 

Yelling  like  all  the  hounds  of  hell  released 

The  reefs  looked  nearer  when  the  lightnings  gleamed 

The  terror  that  was  morning  shewed  how  near. 

Reefs  hard  at  hand  and  doomed  ships  dragging  drear. 

Calliope,  sea-streaming  like  a  sluice, 

Now  battened  down  against  the  appalling  sea. 

Then  her  fore-yard  snapped  lashings  and  broke  loose, 

And  swung  there  like  a  devil  having  glee, 

Threatening  mast  and  ship:  a  thing  of  fear. 

Brave  seamen  made  it  let  its  swinging  be. 

Then  Death  himself  showed  betwixt  ship  and  shore. 

Death's  very  self,  wide-opening  his  door, 
The  anchors  useless  and  the  breakers  close, 
The  ship  Vandalia,  helpless,  dead  ahead, 
And  now,  in  sudden  sheer,  the  Olga  rose, 
Her  bowsprit  struck  the  foreyard  as  she  sped, 

191 


It  thrust  her  off  a  living  instant  more, 
Or,  in  collision,  both  ships  had  been  dead, 
Rammed,  one  or  both,  and  sunk,  with  none  to  tell. 

Then,  on  Calliope,  a  marvel  fell : 

The  vast  Vandcdia  swung  beneath  her  bow 

Lifting  her,  by  the  bowsprit,  as  she  rolled, 

Snapping  its  gear,  and  yet,  men  knew  not  how, 

Although  the  very  blood  of  all  ran  cold 

Then  rolled  away  again  and  all  was  well, 

The  released  bowsprit  fell  back  as  of  old, 

The  ships  swung  clear:  Life  gave  an  instant's  grace. 

Still,  the  Calliope  had  Death  in  face, 
The  reef  three  yards  astern,  in  surf  past  telling; 
The  helpless  Olga  swinging  at  her  side ; 
The  air  all  devils  from  all  hell  rebelling ; 
Ahead,  Vandalia,  poised  to  re-collide; 
No  anchor  holding,  and  of  lull  no  trace, 
Yet  half  one  little  instant  to  decide, 
Whether  to  stay,  or  struggle  to  go  out. 

One  little  hope  shone  in  that  death  of  doubt: 
To  slip  the  cable  and  to  steam  to  sea, 
Backing  a  yard,  to  clear  Vandalia  s  stern, 
Missing  the  reef,  and  her  (if  that  might  be) ; 
Then,  if  the  engines  told,  the  luck  might  turn; 
Then,  if  the  gear  held  and  their  hearts  were  stout, 
And  the  Olga  spared  them,  they  might  live  and  learn. 
Kane  gave  command  for  'every  pound  of  steam'. 

192 


Who  has  not  suffered  anguish  in  a  dream, 
Devil  or  Death  at  hand,  at  point  to  spring, 
The  hooded  cobra  poised,  the  axe  uplifted, 
And  gasped  for  dread  of  what  a  gasp  might  bring? 
The  ship,  her  cable  slipped,  an  instant  drifted 
She  paused  betwixt  the  fury  and  the  scream, 
In  utmost  strain,  yet  seemingly  unshifted. 
With  two  ships  dragging  helpless  in  her  way. 

The  three  seemed  bound  for  Death  in  Dead  Man's  Bay, 
Above  the  tempest's  yell  rose  the  surf's  thunder. 
The  engines  beat,  and  yet  the  ship  stood  still. 
Then  the  Vandalia  surged  to  put  her  under. 
Stern-on,  she  weltered,  like  a  moving  hill, 
Coming  to  swamp  what  could  not  get  away. 
Then,  as  the  two  ships  merged,  they  rolled  asunder, 
The  Olga  surged  alongside,  but  swept  clear. 

Slowly,  in  tensest  strain  on  all  the  gear, 
The  ship  Calliope  began  her  crawl, 
Deluging  bow  and  stern,  yet  making  head. 
And  now  the  flagship  Trenton  lay  in  sprawl, 
Swinging  across  the  channel,  sore-bested. 
Her  rudder  broken,  that  she  could  not  steer 
Her  engine-room  all  swamped,  her  fires  dead, 
A  barrier  to  the  pathway  to  the  sea. 

She  swung  athwart-hawse  the  Calliope, 
This  way  and  that  as  the  confused  sea  bade, 
Barely  a  length  betwixt  her  and  the  reef 
Almost  a  wreck  and  sorely  needing  aid. 

193 


But  all  heroic  effort  stifles  grief, 

Her  seamen  saw  their  sister  of  the  sea, 

(As  at  a  death  the  star  of  a  belief,) 

They  manned  the  Trenton  s  side  and  cheered  and  cheered. 

Gladly  our  seamen  answered  as  they  neared; 
In  that  blind  peril  brave  heart  answered  heart, 
In  that  mad  channel  between  reef  and  ship 
The  touch  of  Fortune's  hand  kept  death  apart. 
The  shears  that  bring  destruction  did  not  clip. 
In  the  blind  storm  the  Trenton  disappeared. 
Calliope,  all  ocean  at  her  lip, 
Strode  on  to  open  sea  in  the  gale's  roaring. 


194 


ON  PILOTS 

Pilots,  those  unknown  beings,  who  remove 
All  ships  and  seamen  from  the  homes  of  love, 
Yet,  still  unknown,  at  long  last,  cheer  the  sight, 
Like  the  first  sounding  or  the  Bishop  Light, 
And  bring  them  home,  to  the  desired  place. 

O  memory,  praise  them,  before  Death  efface. 


Many  have  watched  the  Channel  Pilot  leave 
His  plunging  charge  at  setting-in  of  eve, 
Have  heard  his  cry  of  'Letters  for  ashore', 
While  the  unsheeted  topsails  slat  and  roar, 
He,  gathering  letters,  hurrying  good-byes, 
Leaps  to  his  boat  on  some  well-taken  rise, 
And  so  away,  while  she,  (his  charge)  again 
Bows  to  blue  water  to  the  south  of  Spain. 

O,  to  how  many,  nearing  coast  or  port, 
On  some  keel-trodden  way  of  ship-resort, 
The  Pilot-Schooner  has  appeared,  displaying 
Skill  in  the  sea-arts  beyond  mortal  telling ; 
Some  daughter  of  the  pine-woods  near  the  sea, 
Each  timber  shaped  by  him  who  felled  the  tree, 
On  Massachusetts'  coast,  or  colder  Maine. 

195 


There  the  sweet  sea-horse  leant  against  the  rein ; 
She  with  a  feather  whitening  at  her  lip, 
Sure  as  a  sea-gull  sidling  to  her  ship, 
And  then  away,  upon  another  quest, 
A  swimming  sea-bird  seemingly  at  rest, 
One  with  the  water,  yet  the  water's  Queen. 

Can  the  old  Hoogli  pilots  still  be  seen? 
The  Brig-Men,  studying  the  hourly  change 
Of  depth,  of  current-speed,  of  current-range, 
Of  shoals  becoming  deeps;  of  deeps  that  filled 
(No  warning  given),  as  the  River  willed; 
Of  sands  engulfing  any  ship  that  struck, 
In  depthless  unplumbed  squotulence  of  muck, 
Leaving  but  eddies  wrinkling  under  sky, 
Wrinkling  away,  with  bodies  floating  by? 

They  held  half  England's  shipping  in  their  hands, 
Both  up  and  down,  and  saved  it  from  the  sands. 
Where  pilots  now  have  engines  that  prevail, 
Those  pilots  handled  charges  under  sail. 
Often,  in  channels  without  room  to  turn, 
They  sailed  them  in  and  backed  them  in  astern, 
And  plucked  them  outward  on  the  sailing  day. 

Power  has  given  man  an  easier  way 
These  many  years,  but  we  should  keep  in  mind 
When  weakness  was  and  every  way  was  blind, 
When  England's  shipping  had  no  mark  to  bless 
Between  Old  London  Bridge  and  Dungeness, 

196 


When  all  that  seamen's  threat  had  no  defence 
Save  common  sense  and  too  uncommon  sense ; 
When  the  young  Nelson,  still  a  growing  boy, 
Learned  to  be  pilot  groping  in  a  hoy. 

No  easy  task  for  lads  in  such  a  school, 

To  take  a  ship  in  charge  in  London  Pool, 

To  seize  the  ebb,  and  pull  her  from  the  herd: 

Perhaps  at  quiet  dawn  when  no  wind  stirred, 

To  tide  her  down,  her  only  strength  an  oar, 

Tugged,  to  change  course,  twixt  Wapping  and  the  Nore. 

So,  loitering  down,  with  fifty  loitering  down, 

The  gallows-beaconed  road  from  London  town, 

Nearing  collision,  but  by  luck  and  skill 

Just  scraping  clear  as  clever  pilots  will, 

Catching  a  moment's  gust,  an  instant's  chance, 

By  doing  hand  and  understanding  glance. 

Then,  perhaps,  drifting  into  fog  not  knowing 

What  lay  ahead,  or  near,  but  keeping  going 

The  instinct,  ear,  and  scent  alike  at  strain 

For  some  least  hint  that  made  the  matter  plain; 

Perhaps  a  cock-crow  from  a  Kentish  Farm, 

(Even  a  mooing  cow  has  given  alarm) 

Or  whiff  from  hayfield,  lime-kiln,  bonfire-smoke, 

Each,  coming  when  it  did,  a  voice  that  spoke. 

He  who  has  drifted  thus  in  fogs,  unseeing, 
Has  touched  his  spirit's  unseen  Greater  Being. 

197 


Was  there  not  once  (some  generations  since) 
An  invitation  from  a  foreign  Prince 
Sent  to  an  English  Fleet  to  make  a  stay 
In  some  close  harbour  for  Regatta  Day? 
Himself,  the  foreign  Prince,  would  pilot  all, 
Proud,  in  his  yacht,  lest  dangers  should  befall, 
He,  the  land's  Prince,  would  greatly,  kindly,  lead 
To  that  snug  cove,  the  anchorage  decreed. 

Then,  as  the  teller  told,  a  fog  ensued, 

Fog  in  her  unity  of  solitude, 

Dumb  as  old  Death,  save  where  the  bell-buoys  tossed 

Their  desolate  lamentings  of  things  lost. 

Fog  covered  land  and  water,  beast  and  man, 

Blurring  both  anchorage  and  royal  plan. 

'So,'  the  Prince  said,  we  cannot  steam  today, 

To  pilot-in  the  English  to  the  bay. 

Well . . .  they  must  wait . . .  the  fog  will  lift  anon.' 

A  night  went  by ;  a  struggling  sunbeam  shone, 
Or  seemed  to  shine :  upon  a  little  wind, 
Hardly  a  breath,  the  nulling  dimness  thinned, 
A  summer  brightness  shone  on  all  the  bay. 
There  in  the  cove  appointed,  our  fleet  lay, 
Anchored,  aligned,  in  order,  distance  kept, 
Self-piloted  through  fog  while  landsmen  slept. 

There  comes  a  memory  from  the  long-since  seen; 
The  Waterwitch,  the  Pilot's  barquentine, 
In  summer  sunset  gliding  like  a  ghost 
Under  all  sail  along  the  English  coast. 

198 


Who  did  not  envy  those  aboard  her,  then, 

The  lads  there  training  to  be  pilot-men 

Whose  books  were  Nature's  doings,  seamen's  guides, 

Shallows  and  depths,  sea-currents,  sets  and  tides ; 

Rocks  breaking  and  rocks  hidden,  where  the  tint 

Upon  the  water's  surface  gave  the  hint; 

And  all  that  wisdom  gathered  from  the  lead 

When  sudden  fog  engulfed  what  lay  ahead; 

Their  life's  communion  with  the  Greater  Mind 

That  told  the  courses  when  the  way  was  blind ; 

The  acute  senses  that  receive  and  fuse 

At  once,  the  fifty  signs  to  one  of  use? 

What  happier  life  for  youth,  than  to  engage 

To  spend  a  twelvemonth  learning  pilotage? 

'By  God  and  guess,'  the  seaman's  proverb  said, 
So  are  paths  found,  where  paths  were  never  made. 
By  thought's  intensity  transcending  thought, 
The  way  is  found,  the  ship  to  safety  brought, 
Or  sent  away,  with  every  hope  to  thrive 
Breasting  blue  water  like  a  thing  alive. 


199 


THE  STRANGE  CASE  OF 
CAPTAIN  BARNABY 

There  seems  to  be  no  doubt  that,  in  or  about  the  year  1687,  a  Mrs 
Booty,  the  widow  of  a  brewer,  caused  the  trial  of  Captain  Barnaby  in  the 
Court  of  King's  Bench,  'in  a  Suit  of  £1,000  damages',  for  the  defamation 
of  her  late  husband's  character,  by  the  repetition  of  the  tale  told  here. 

The  case  was  heard  before  the  Chief fustice,  Herbert,  and  three  Judges, 
Wythens,  Holloway  and  Wright. 

Members  of  the  crews  of  three  small  ships  swore  that  they  had  seen 
Mr  Booty  driven  into  a  fiery  furnace  on  the  island  of Stromboli  at  3.14 
p.m.  on  the  previous  15  May,  as  they  rested  ashore  there,  after  killing 
curlews  for  sea-store. 

The  Chief  Justice  declared  that  such  testimony  could  not  be  doubted, 
and  that  they  had  seen  Mr  Booty,  however  strange  and  awful  the  tale 
might  seem:  Mrs  Booty  therefore  lost  her  case. 

We  were  bound  home,  when,  on  the  second  day 
We  raised  the  Fiery  island  and  drew  near. 
We  marked  one  glowing  cranny  smoking  gray, 
But  all  else  glittered  green  and  promised  cheer. 
The  brooks  were  sparkling,  and  the  birds  in  air 
Uncountable  as  snow-flakes  and  as  lovely. 

So,  being  short  of  water  and  of  meat, 
I  bade  my  consorts  anchor,  and  then  land. 
We  filled  the  barrels  of  our  little  fleet, 
Then  in  a  long  line  forming,  gun  in  hand, 

200 


We  walked  the  grass  and  shot  the  grey  sea-geese, 
The  great  St  Martin's  plovers  and  sea-curlews. 

Enough,  for  all  three  ships,  to  last  us  in. 

At  the  grass-edge,  I  bade  the  shooting  cease. 

But  then  we  saw  a  most  strange  game  begin. 

Prone  in  the  grass  we  watched  it  at  our  ease. 

A  negro  and  a  white  seemed  playing  tag 

Down  on  the  sea-beach  where  the  boats  were  lying. 

I  cannot  call  to  mind  who  saw  them  first, 

But  some  one  called  'Who  are  they?  None  of  ours.' 

As  all  men  know,  the  island  is  accurst, 

Unvisited  except  in  daylight  hours. 

No  other  ship  than  ours  rode  the  bay, 

Yet  here  two  strangers  played  at  Snap  and  Dodger. 

We  were  two  hundred  yards  at  least  away. 
Our  keepers  of  the  boats  were  watching,  too. 
The  couple  dodged  the  east  side  of  the  bay. 
And  one  thing  in  the  game  we  swiftly  knew : 
The  black  was  bent  on  driving  him  to  us, 
The  white  one  tried  to  pass  him  and  get  eastward. 

Now  we,  to  westward,  lay  below  the  scree 
Above  which,  in  the  rock,  the  cranny  glowed 
Red,  sometimes,  putting  colour  on  the  sea, 
Then  dimming  into  dusk  as  the  fumes  flowed. 
We  heard  our  boatmen  hail  them :  no  reply 
Came  from  the  two  intent  upon  their  dodging. 

201 


The  next  thing  that  we  noticed  was  the  speed, 

The  unusual  speed,  with  which  the  negro  ran, 

Not  only  swift,  but  tireless,  indeed 

A  leopard  or  a  greyhound  of  a  man, 

And  every  burst  or  effort  to  get  by 

Was  headed  back,  towards  us,  nearer,  nearer. 

Mostly,  the  white  man's  face  was  to  the  east; 
We  saw  the  black  face  better,  clear-cut,  lean, 
Something  betwixt  an  Arab  and  a  priest 
With  every  faculty  intently  keen. 
He  wore  black  runners'  shorts,  close  to  the  skin 
And  never  wild-cat  watched  his  quarry  better. 

And  then,  we  marvelled  that  the  dodgers  paid 

No  heed  whatever  to  us  twenty  men 

Prone  on  the  grass,  watching  the  game  they  played: 

We  were  as  accidents  beyond  their  ken, 

They  were  intent  upon  an  unknown  game 

On  which  (we  felt  assured)  big  stakes  depended. 

Then,  as  they  neared,  the  white  man's  figure  seemed 
Familiar,  somehow,  to  me,  shape  and  pose 
Perhaps  some  recollection  of  dream  dreamed. 
Then  suddenly  (by  this  time  they  were  close) 
I  saw  his  face,  and  cried  'For  the  sea's  sake 
Why  . .  .  this  is  Mr  B,  my  next-door  neighbour.' 

Then  both  my  mates,  and  others  of  my  crew 
Agreed  'Old  Mr  B,  marine-purveyor,' 
A  not  too  honest  one,  as  well  we  knew 

202 


For  many  a  horse-shoe  lay  in  many  a  layer 
Of  skin  and  bone  purveyed  by  him  as  beef. 
We  hailed  him:  'Mr  B  . . .'  he  took  no  notice. 

None,  but  he  turned,  not  seeing  us,  not  knowing, 
Only  exhausted,  and  the  black  one  sprang 
Gripped  him  and  carried  to  the  cranny  glowing, 
Which  opened  red  and  took  them  with  a  clang, 
One  instant  they  glowed  red,  then  the  rocks  clashed ; 
The  smoke  blew  clear :  the  rock  face  bore  no  cranny. 

Then,  truly,  we  were  on  our  feet,  aghast. 
What  had  we  seen  but  someone  borne  to  hell 
Dragged  to  the  doom  of  flames  that  ever  last 
One  whom  we  all  had  seen  and  some  knew  well. 
The  cranny  had  closed-to  upon  the  pair 
A  little  smoke  curled  upward  from  the  rock-face. 

We  crept  toward  the  rock,  hot  to  the  feet, 
Plainly  appalling  heat  was  just  within  . . . 
And  growlings  of  great  powers  shook  the  heat; 
We  were  at  Hell,  the  punishment  of  sin. 
White-faced,  without  a  word  we  took  our  loads 
Back  to  the  boats,  and  so  aboard,  for  England. 

So,  reaching  home,  I  asked  for  Mr  B. 
Friends,  he  had  died  that  very  hour  and  day 
When  we  had  watched  him  hunted  by  the  sea 
Into  Hell's  door  a  thousand  miles  away. 
Died  in  distress,  they  said,  for  things  ill  done. 
Had  what  we  seen  been  his  eternal  sentence? 


203 


Well . . .  our  tale  spread,  that  we  had  seen  him  borne 

Into  Hell  fire  by  a  thing  of  Hell, 

And  Mrs.  B.  soon  heard,  you  may  be  sworn. 

As  you  suppose,  she  did  not  take  it  well. 

She  heard  a  Captain's  wife  repeat  the  tale 

And  sued  her,  straight,  for  slandering  her  husband. 


Perhaps  the  Captain's  Wife  had  touched  the  tale 
I  know  not,  but  the  widow's  case  was  brought 
With  all  hands  summoned  and  forbid  to  sail 
And  nothing  talked  of  more  and  little  thought. 
Till  there  we  were  a-kissing  Books  in  court 
Before  Lord  Justice  and  the  other  Judges. 


Mind,  thirty-five  of  us  had  seen  the  pair, 
Those  in  the  ships,  those  in  the  boats,  and  we 
And  each  one  of  these  twenty  last  could  swear 
That  beyond  doubt  the  white  was  Mr  B  . .  . 
His  hair,  his  venerable  look,  his  eyes . . . 
A  mark,  where  a  dog  bit  him,  on  his  knuckles. 


So,  having  heard,  the  Lord  Chief  Justice  spoke. 
'No  stranger  case  has  ever  yet  been  tried. 
What  seemed  at  first  an  ill-intentioned  joke 
Stands,  now,  unique,  no  precedent  to  guide : 
You  have  heard  twenty  men  confirm  the  fact. 
This  was  no  fiction,  but  a  witnessed  act. 
However  strange,  however  out  of  reason, 

204 


Beyond  all  doubt,  they  tell  of  what  they  saw, 

A  thing  most  terrible,  a  granted  sight 

Of  Justice  done  by  an  eternal  law 

That  without  statute  ministers  the  right. 

This  the  condernning  Justice  let  them  see 

For  purpose  not  revealed,  but  surely  righteous. 

The  case  before  us  fails.' 

So  the  Court  cleared, 
And  we,  no  longer  held,  at  once  set  sail 
We  ran  the  colours  up  with  guns  and  cheered. 
With  ebb  to  help  us  and  a  topsail  gale 
By  midnight  we  could  see  the  lights  of  France, 
By  cockcrow  we  were  running  past  the  Foreland. 


205 


Due 

Date    Due 

BROWSING  ROOM 

Returned              Due 

Returned 

/ 

/ 

/ 

1 

'            / 

/ 

fl]3?66 


The  bluebells,  and  other  verse  main 
821.91M396bC2 


3  lEbE  03300  7bbb